Covid Vaccine Memes
My mate got their covid vaccine yesterday and I can tell you the most prominent side effect is the inability to shut up about getting the covid vaccine.
Scientists looking at data for the Oxford Vaccine: “Might – MIGHT – increase risk of blood clots. Pause all use immediately!
Scientists looking at data about blood clots in women and the contraceptive pill over 60 years: Deal with it!
“I’m not getting a vaccine so they can microchip me!” says the man typing into his phone that tracks his every thought and constantly logs his location.
Christmas normally vs Christmas this year…
The owners of Zoom reading that the Covid-19 vaccine may allow resumption of normal life.
Me celebrating what fun I’ll have after getting Covid Vaccine vs Me realizing the anti-vaxxers won’t get it, keeping the Covid virus spreading.
Introvert looking at the Vaccine knowing lockdown will end soon.
Imagine being a scientist, studying for years, working even more, discovering a vaccine for a new disease, rigorously testing it, producing all the data, getting it through peer review, and then being told the public won’t trust it until they hear the phrase…
“Biggins is in!”
10 Myths About Coronavirus Vaccines
Separating fact from fiction when it comes to getting vaccinated against COVID-19.
En español | More than 245 million Americans have rolled up their sleeves for the coronavirus vaccines, but still a significant share of the eligible population (about 40 percent) is not fully vaccinated.
A big reason: False information spread online and in person has persuaded many people to skip the shot. In fact, a 2021 Kaiser Family Foundation report found about 80 percent of adults who say they will “definitely not” get the vaccine believe or are unsure about at least one prevailing COVID-19 vaccine myth. And a majority of adults (54 percent) either believe some rampant misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccines or are unable to debunk it.
Facts are especially important as new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths climb throughout the U.S., driven largely by the highly contagious delta and omicron variants. Here are some common coronavirus vaccine myths and the truth behind each one.
A Milpitas Mom’s Favorite Joke.