Vaccine skepticism lurks in town famous for syphilis study
Vaccine skepticism lurks in town famous for syphilis study
TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP) — Lucenia Dunn spent the early days of the coronavirus pandemic encouraging people to wear masks and keep a safe distance from each other in Tuskegee, a mostly Black city where the government once used unsuspecting African American men as guinea pigs in a study of a sexually transmitted disease.
Now, the onetime mayor of the town immortalized as the home of the infamous “Tuskegee syphilis study” is wary of getting inoculated against COVID-19. Among other things, she's suspicious of the government promoting a vaccine that was developed in record time when it can't seem to conduct adequate virus testing or consistently provide quality rural health care.
“I’m not doing this vaccine right now. That doesn’t mean I’m never going to do it. But I know enough to withhold getting it until we see all that is involved,” said Dunn, who is Black.
The coronavirus immunization campaign is off to a shaky start in Tuskegee and other parts of Macon County. Area leaders point to a resistance among residents spurred by a distrust of government promises and decades of failed health programs. Many people in this city of 8,500 have relatives who were subjected to unethical government experimentation during the syphilis study.
“It does have an impact on decisions. Being in this community, growing up in this community, I would be very untruthful if I didn’t say that,” said Frank Lee, emergency management director in Macon County. Lee is Black.
Health experts have stressed both the vaccines' safety and efficacy. They have noted that while the vaccines were developed with record-breaking speed, they were based on decades of prior research. Vaccines used in the U.S. have shown no signs of serious side effects in studies of tens of thousands of people. And with more than 26 million vaccinations administered in the U.S. alone so far, no red flags have been reported.
Tuskegee is not a complete outlier. A recent survey conducted by the communications firm Edelman revealed that as of November, only 59% of people in the U.S. were willing to get vaccinated within a year with just 33% happy to do so as soon as possible.
But skepticism seems to run deeper here.
When Alabama and the rest of the South were still segregated by race, government medical workers starting in 1932 withheld treatment for unsuspecting men infected with syphilis in Tuskegee and surrounding Macon County so physicians could track the disease. The study, which involved about 600 men, ended in 1972 only after it was revealed by The Associated Press.
A lawsuit filed on behalf of the men by Black Tuskegee attorney Fred Gray resulted in a $9 million settlement, and then-President Bill Clinton formally apologized on behalf of the U.S. government in 1997. But the damage left a legacy of distrust that extends far beyond Tuskegee: A December survey showed 40% of Black people nationwide said they wouldn’t get the coronavirus vaccine. Such hesitancy is more entrenched than among white people, even though Black Americans have been hit disproportionately hard by the virus.
The Chicago-based Black nationalist group Nation of Islam is warning away members nationwide with an online presentation titled “Beyond Tuskegee: Why Black People Must Not Take The Experimental COVID-19 Vaccine.”
Gray, now 90 and still practicing law in Tuskegee, rejects such comparisons. The syphilis study and the COVID-19 vaccine are completely different, he said. He believes that enough that he himself has gotten the vaccine and is publicly encouraging others to do the same.
Georgette Moon is on a similar mission. Hoping to both protect herself and encourage skittish friends, the former city council member recently bared an arm and let a public health nurse immunize her. Now, Moon said, if only more fellow Black residents could overcome their lingering fears and get the vaccine.
“The study is a huge factor,” Moon said. “I’ve had very qualified, well-educated people tell me they are not going to take it right now.”
The Macon County health department, which is administering two-step Moderna vaccines in its modern building near downtown, could perform as many as 160 immunizations a day, officials said. But a maximum of 140 people received the vaccine on any single date during the first six days of appointments, with a total of 527 people immunized during the period. Health care workers, emergency responders and long-term care residents are currently eligible for shots in Alabama, along with people 75 and older.
There are some signs of hope. State statistics show a slow uptick in the number of people coming in for vaccinations, and word seems to be filtering through the community that it’s OK to be vaccinated.
Down the street from the county clinic, the Veterans Affairs hospital in Tuskegee is vaccinating veterans 65 and older. While only 40% of the VA workers in the area have been vaccinated, officials said, more people are agreeing to the shots than during the initial wave.
“They know people who have had the vaccine, they hear more about it, they become more comfortable with it,” said Dr. April Truett, an infectious disease physician at the hospital.
The Rev. John Curry Jr. said he and his wife took the shots after the health department said they could get appointments without a long wait. The pastor of the oldest Black church in town, Curry said he is encouraging congregants to get the vaccine.
Yet he said he also understands the power of lingering distrust in a town that will forever be linked to the syphilis study, one of the most reviled episodes of U.S. public health history.
“It’s a blemish on Tuskegee,” he said. "It hangs on the minds of people.”
India doubles long-neglected healthcare spending and sets aside £3.5bn for Covid vaccines as it eyes recovery
India doubles long-neglected healthcare spending and sets aside £3.5bn for Covid vaccines as it eyes recovery
The Indian government has doubled its healthcare budget to Rs 2.2 trillion (£22bn), setting aside an additional £3.5bn to be spent on Covid-19 vaccines this year alone, as it unveiled its annual budget amid the worst economic downturn in its post-independence history.
Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented an unprecedented pandemic budget, with measures aimed at buoying the £1.97 trillion Indian economy that is still projected to shrink further before it bounces back after the damage wrought by Covid-19.
India has consistently spent between 1.2 per cent to 1.6 per cent of its GDP on healthcare in recent years, significantly lower than other major economies including developing nations like Brazil and South Africa.
Ms Sitharaman kicked off her budget speech by announcing that the government will launch a new federal health scheme with an outlay of around Rs 641 billion (£6.4bn) over the next six years.
Ms Sitharaman allocated Rs 350bn (£3.5bn) to be spent on Covid-19 vaccine alone, saying more funds would be allocated to the cause as and when required.
Adar Poonawalla, chief executive of the Serum Institute of India – the world’s largest vaccine maker – welcomed the government’s emphasis on healthcare spending.
“Globally, spending on healthcare infrastructure and vaccine have given countries and their economies the best bang for their buck,” Mr Poonawalla told The Independent.
“Therefore we welcome the foreign minister’s emphasis on healthcare spending, and immunisation especially for Covid-19 and the pneumococcal vaccines as this will help India recover rapidly from this pandemic. Hopefully, this will also encourage more innovation and expansion in the sector”.
Besides the global pandemic, the budget came as India faced an internal crisis too with ongoing protests by angry farmers against reforms to the agricultural sector.
On Monday security was beefed up across Delhi with police installing additional checkpoints and barricades at various points of entry to the capital, leading to hours-long traffic jams for many. Security was heightened over fears of angry farmers marching upon parliament, days after violence unfolded in the capital on the country's 72nd Republic Day leaving one dead and several injured. In the event a planned farmers’ protest did not materialise.
The budget included several measures aimed at appeasing farmers, though nothing that analysts deemed transformational for the strained relationship with the government.
An agriculture infrastructure and development cess (a tax whose proceeds are ring-fenced for a specific cause) has been proposed to improve the sector.
Saying that the government is “committed to the welfare of the farmers”, Ms Sitharaman increased an agriculture credit target to over £165m for the fiscal year 2022.
Rupa Rege Nitsure, chief economist at L&T Financial Holdings, told Reuters that the budget, in particular enhanced spending on health, “will go a long way in supporting economic recovery”.
But there was disappointment in the tourism and hospitality sectors, with little offered to help businesses that have been among the hardest hit by the pandemic.
“Not just tourism, the budget has no mention of the services sector which is the largest employment generator,” Subhash Goyal, Secretary-General of Federation of Associations in Indian Tourism and Hospitality (FAITH) said in a statement to The Independent.
Derek O'Brien, spokesperson of the opposition All India Trinamool Congress (TMC), lashed out at the government, calling the budget "sell India" and “visionless”.
"India's first paperless budget is also a 100 per cent visionless budget. Theme of the fake budget is Sell India!" TMC spokesperson Mr O'Brien said. "Railways: sold, Airports: sold, Ports: sold, Insurance: sold PSUs: 23 sold!"
He said the budget offered nothing for India’s burgeoning middle class, and that it would make the rich richer and the poor poorer.
Reference: Independent: Shweta Sharma
‘Covid denier’ Gary Matthews dies from the virus alone day after testing positive
‘Covid denier’ Gary Matthews dies from the virus alone day after testing positive
The family of a “Covid denier” said they begged him to wear facemask before he died alone in his flat from the virus that has claimed over 100,000 Brits.
Artist Gary Matthews, 46, had a positive Covid-19 test and was in isolation when he passed away at his home in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, on January 13.
He had been ill for a week and tested positive the day before he died.
It is not known exactly how the "kind but shy” painter caught the virus, but according to his family he did not wear a mask or adhere to safety measures and continued to meet with friends after falling for wild covid conspiracy theories online.
His Instagram profile shows he was a talented portrait artist, creating portraits of famous faces from film and music like Roger Moore after he took up painting in later life, attending the University of Wolverhampton’s Fine Art painting course.
In a profile on a local art group, he said: “I have been an avid drawer from a young age. From early on drawing for me was a means of telling stories as much as writing.
"I am drawn to images in painting and photography that capture the moment; that utilizes lighting and colour to convey a mood or atmosphere.”
His Twitter profile shows how he regularly shared anti-lockdown messages, calling Professor Chris Whitty “Dr Death” for suggesting tougher rules over Christmas.
His last retweets include Talk Radio’s Julia Hartley-Brewer calling for a “reality check” that most people in the UK don’t know someone who died of the virus, and Mark Dolan’s return to the same station after he cut up a facemask on a live stream.
Just weeks before his death he liked a post from Brexit Alliance London assembly member David Kurten saying: “Show your face, Meet your friends, Hug other people, Go where you want, Disobey tyrants #FightBackBetter.”
Matthews’s cousin Tristan Copeland said he had begged him to wear a mask and maintain social distance. “But he and his friends had the mindset that they needed to go out and meet people to show they didn’t believe the government.
Mr Copeland called his cousin a “brilliant artist”, telling the Shropshire Star: “He didn't deserve that. No-one does... He was still a beloved member of the family and he didn't change as a person."
“It has been heartbreaking for the family. We're still taking it all in. They were all very close. He'd speak to his family every other day. He had a sister and a niece and nephew.”
His mother posted a short tribute, saying: “My beautiful son we will walk along rivers together someday, no matter what people may say or make up, as a family we will love you forever.”
Peter Roscoe posted a tribute to Gary who he met aged 19 when he worked door to door selling the Socialist Worker and hit out at people using his friends profile to spread Covid conspiracies.
“A great artist and photographer and a gentle guy. He wanted a better world”, Mr Roscoe wrote.
“I was so sorry that, in recent times, he seemed convinced that Covid was some sort of hoax or part of a worldwide conspiracy, and it feels awful, to me, to see his page now being used by people who want others to share that world view.
“Gary chose to disregard Covid precautions. Now he is dead.
“Thank you for challenging those who are using his site as a platform for, in my view, cold dangerous and cruel ideas about what it is to be a human being. Gary was not like that”.
His family revealed his funeral will take place on February 9 with limited attendees. They asked mourners to respect their privacy and let them grieve in peace during this difficult time.
They added: “Please be considerate when posting comments online.”
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has penned a heartfelt piece urging Londoner’s to counter anti-vaccine messages and confront family members who spread misinformation.
He wrote: “Pernicious propaganda is already putting lives at risk — causing people in our city, including the most vulnerable, to reject the opportunity to be vaccinated.
“Throughout this pandemic, Londoners have been extraordinary in the way they have responded — making incredible sacrifices and supporting the most vulnerable. Becoming effective vaccine allies is now one more duty we must take on to win this battle — because this is how we can save many thousands of lives, protect our NHS and get our city back on its feet.”
Reference: Evening Standard: Barney Davis
Captain Tom Moore, 100, in hospital as he battles coronavirus and pneumonia
Captain Tom Moore, 100, in hospital as he battles coronavirus and pneumonia
NHS hero Captain Sir Tom Moore is being treated in hospital after he tested positive for Covid.
The 100-year-old WW2 veteran has raised more than £30million for the NHS during the coronavirus pandemic.
In a statement released by his daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore today, she said her dad tested positive for coronavirus last week while being treated for pneumonia.
Sir Tom was reportedly unable to have his Covid vaccine before catching the disease because of his pneumonia medications.
He was taken to a ward at Bedford Hospital today after requiring extra help with his breathing but is not in intensive care.
The statement reads: "I wanted to update everybody that today my father was admitted to hospital.
"Over the last few weeks he was being treated for pneumonia and last week tested positive for Covid-19.
"He was at home with us until today when he needed additional help with his breathing.
"He is being treated in a ward, although he is not in ICU.
"The medical care he has received in the last few weeks has been remarkable and we know that the wonderful staff at Bedford Hospital will do all they can to make him comfortable and hopefully return home as soon as possible.
"We understand that everyone will be wishing him well. We are of course focusing on my father and will update you when we are able to. Hannah x"
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Twitter: "My thoughts are very much with @CaptainTomMoore and his family. You've inspired the whole nation, and I know we are all wishing you a full recovery."
Labour leader Keir Starmer also wished him well, adding: "The whole nation hopes you get well soon @captaintommoore. You've been an inspiration to us all throughout this crisis."
Michael Ball, who recorded a charity single with Capt Sir Tom that reached number one, tweeted: "Love and prayers for @captaintommoore and his lovely family as he battles this bastard of a virus.
"Stay strong Sir. We are all here for you."
Susanna Reid tweeted: “Get well soon Captain Tom” and Piers Morgan said: “Come on, Captain Sir Tom – we're all rooting for you.”
Other figures have also sent their regards to Capt Sir Tom, including vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi who said he was “praying” for him and Mayor of London Sadiq Khan who thanked the NHS for his care.
“Hoping for a speedy recovery and to see Captain Tom back home with his family soon,” Mr Khan added.
Sir Tom, born in Keighley, West Yorkshire, raised more than £33million for the NHS by walking 100 laps of his garden in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire.
After his 100th lap, with his medals on display, he gave reassurance to a worried nation, which had seen their lives turned upside down by the virus.
He said: “You’ve all got to remember that we will get through it in the end, it will all be right.
“For all those people finding it difficult at the moment, the sun will shine on you again and the clouds will go away.”
He was knighted by the Queen, hit number one in the singles chart and received a Pride of Britain award.
He served as a Second Lieutenant in Burma and took part in the amphibious assault on Arakan.
The national treasure was involved in the final push to the Burmese capital of Rangoon in what has become known as 'The Forgotten War'.
He previously encouraged the British public to stay strong as the country entered its second lockdown.
His charity - The Captain Tom Foundation - launched a campaign called Walk and Talk which aims is to get as many people as possible walking and talking, spreading hope and easing loneliness.
Sir Tom said: "I would like us all to stand shoulder to shoulder - metaphorically!
"Let's try not to get downhearted, we will get through this, whatever is thrown at us and together we can ensure that tomorrow will be a good day."
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