"Dr. Ryan Stanton says the latest survey shows around 50 to 55 percent of Kentuckians will get the vaccine when they can," Hedrick reports. "To reach herd immunity, the magic number is 75 to 80 percent. Stanton says we won’t know for sure how short or close we are to those levels until mid-year."
Stanton, an emergency-room physician, and other doctors worry that the lack of herd immunity would lead to "flare-ups of cases year-round and chances for the virus to mutate easier," perhaps into more contagious strains, Hedrick reports.
Because vaccination has been politicized, just like the pandemic as a whole, "Stanton says doctors have had to play myth-busters a lot when it comes to the vaccine," Hedrick says.
“There’s a lot of false narrative and myths and dogmas that are still
out there that are simply not true,” Stanton said. “Whether it’s the newness of the
vaccines, whether it’s the risk for whatever the perceived association
it is with potential risks for them. They just aren’t there and those
aren’t factual.”
Stanton made this argument: “If you want to live the way we had to live in 2020, then not getting the vaccine is reasonable, but if you want to move past this, we need to get as many people vaccinated as can be.”
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