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It makes sense to take the vaccine - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

DR ERROL N BENJAMIN

WHEN I watch aghast how our covid19 numbers in infections and death keep rising exponentially and phenomenally by the day and a seemingly safe world now reverting to the throes of omicron, I feel a sense of outrage by the kind of illogic that is often spewed in the media.

Like one well-known self-confessed vaccinated public figure who is insisting on others having a choice when the choice not to be vaccinated can be to the demise of others. And another of similar ilk, claiming to be pro-vax but also pro-choice, with the illogic that the latter should be afforded to the people because vaccinated people can also contract covid19, but without balancing that position with the other side that the vaccine also provides for more protection than being without it.

It is hardly necessary to emphasise how such illogic can often influence unquestioning minds which this country can well do without at this critical juncture. Those of us who can say a word to stem these negative influences should feel duty-bound to do so.

Which is why, without being overly presumptuous, I am hoping that it may be useful to some to understand my conversion from being anti-vax to becoming pro-vax and that it may do a little to assist in this much needed effort. At first I was sceptical about the vaccines, for in understanding how vaccines of the past became legitimate by years of trials, I doubted whether this could be said about the covid19 vaccines, which had emerged out of a dire emergency without the years of trials associated with the now accepted vaccines such as those for polio, measles et al.

And this scepticism would have been fuelled by the emerging anti-vax stance, possibly out of a sense of the same 'trial' deficiency of the covid19 which kept me at bay, together with the mass propaganda about the unsavoury ingedients of the vaccines, human and animal, which many hesitated to have injected into their bodies, so much so that I found myself an ardent anti-vaxxer ready to message anyone about the perceived problems associated with the vaccine.

But then the tide would turn for me, not out of a whim, but by a fairly critical examination of the covid19 problem as it was being handled, with deaths in the double digits and infections equally alarming in the hundreds. And with no credible communications system of how the individual can attempt to combat this deadly virus, case in point being the need to fortify the immune system through appropriate measures inter alia, or any information, after hospitalisation, about any plausible treatment cycle that could assist progression out of the cycle of infection leading to possible death.

In this situation of such dire uncertainty of how covid19 was being dealt with, I was caught in the psychological trauma of feeling that contracting covid19 was just one step away with no informed means of staving it off. This was cogent enough to force me into weighing my options: either believing all the anti-vax propaganda which was swamping the media - and that persuasiv

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