It's largely useless. Most people don't have access to medical reviews nor do they have the relevent expertise to understand the research material.
What the layman should do though is consult a medical doctor to get his or her opinion on the subject and keep themselves informed of the recommandation of their national health agency and that of other countries or international bodies.
Proper research, medical doctor's opinion and health agency around the world all agree on the subject of vaccination which is highly recommanded if not outright demanded for all people above the age of 12 beside a rare few exception linked to immune system suppression.
True.
Both sides are pretty much in the same boat of "expertise" and go off of what other experts and doctors tell them when making decisions to get or not to get the vaccine. Both parties can depend on misinformation or propaganda. Both parties can make decisions off of fear rather than rational. It just depends on the individual person.
They should, yes.
Most people really don't need to go to their doctors to get their opinion. Taking the vaccine is taking it at one's own risk, so there's no issue there.
It's not like it's knocking people dead or anything like that.
That's a red herring. I am not interested nor need to know the precise motives of people for doing such an action. If they incidently came to the right conclusion despite using the wrong method, I will be satisfied nonetheless. In case of emergency like this one, we can't embarass ourselves too much with motives. Once the danger is largely passed, we can redouble our efforts to teach proper critical thinking skills and basic medical knowledge to people so that the next time around their motivation are rational and socially conscious instead of counting on luck.
If you're making a claim of people's ignorance without generalization its something to keep in mind before jumping to conclusions. We don't know.
I would hope we wouldn't really put too much emphasis on motives. Unfortunately, not all provaxxers agree with this sentiment.
That's the point of experts. They know things that you don't and can tell you what you should do in a given circumstances. Not listening to them would be gambling that the experts are wrong and this is fundamentally irrational, especially in that specific case since the principles behind vaccination for disease are well known, well understood and demonstrable via double-blind experiments and in practice in society. If you are affraid of experts with no intimate knowledge of yourself, consult a doctor who knows you and seen you in the past for other issues and they will confirm if you should take the vaccine. The circumstances in which you should not take the COVID vaccine are very narrow.
The only reason to listen to them is if you know you're considering taking the vaccine and it may be worth your while. Because I have health condition, I would personally go to my doctors and not 100% depend on the CDC as a bible to tell me what to do and what not to do.
You guys treat the experts like god. That's totally different than going to your own doctor who suggested a given med and you questioning him despite his expertise.
They aren't presented that much because vaccines are very efficient. The overwhelming majority of serious cases of COVID-19 are from unvaccinated people. Of course, they aren't foolproof, nothing is in medicine, but that's understood to anybody who has a very basic knowledge of numeracy.
I would hope they do not to prove the vaccine is insufficient but give the public (those who are more skeptical of their healthcare advice) can get both sides and assess accordingly. It's not to challenge the efficiency of the vaccine but keeping people informed there are cons involved without downplaying them heavily. It leaves the impression of government "hiding" something. Whether it is true or not "we don't know" but I'm sure a lot of people will say it's an antivax thing even though they don't know either.
Actually, health experts aren't biased, at least not to the point to deserve the moniquer. They are the least biased people on the subject of healthcare since that's what it takes to be an expert; very little bias and preconception; a lot of knowledge and experience in the field.
When politics are involved and the heavy push there is a lot of bias. Can you imagine an expert finding out something extremely bad about the vaccine but he's not allowed to express it due to the push for people to get it?
I wouldn't be surprised if it is heavily true experts have more knowledge they have to suppress because its degraded so much they don't want to throw off public trust.
If the experts can't give you whats the worse that can happen without downplaying, I'd be a bit suspicious.
That's an example of misinformation and or incredible stupidity. To support such a belief a person must either believe vaccine aren't tested (and they are; rigorously). Must believe vaccine are new (and they aren't they are over 200 years old). Must believe pandemics and epidemics were never solved by mass vaccination (and there were many). Must believe epidemiology and medicine is a fringe science (which it's not). They must also ignore the positive results achieved by the current vaccines against that disease and they are important.
I never heard of that being misinformation. I didn't get it anywhere. I don't look up conspiracy theories and anything of that type of "nonesense." Why do you think we're not playing it by ear?
The only thing dividing people is misinformation, malice and stupidity of the exploited variety. There is no rational reason not to take the vaccine at this point and time. That some were worried at the beginning of the vaccination drive can be understandable, but over a billion people have been vaccinated and for well over 6 months (the time at which potential long term side effects appear). There are no reasonnable excuses anymore. There are only fools, fooled, frauders and a small portion of ineligible people left to be vaccinated.
I'm heavily surprised provaxxers don't see it. I really am. In my opinion, how to say, the media and government has influenced you so much it's really hard for you to see other perspectives. Economy division is not a enemy vs saints type of thing. I mean, I posted a list and examples of how propaganda is at play but provaxxer bias makes it hard for them to even read it without downplaying it or rebutting it without discredit. I mean when I read facts and all I don't discredit it. I don't say COVID isn't real and things of that, um, nonsense. But I'm surprised there are a few people that do. The whole thing is just making me shocked but thankfully, when I'm not online it doesn't cross my mind. I don't have strong opinions "like yours" since I don't know people personally to judge.