Tag: Coronavirus

The Vax Arrived! Who Will Take It?

Margaret Keenan, 90, was given the first shot

Today, Margaret Keenan, 90, became the first person in the UK to receive Pfizer/BioNTech’s coronavirus vaccine as Britain kicks off the global effort to fight COVID-19.  The FDA is expected to issue an emergency approval this week. Developed by US and German researchers, British and European regulators were able to move more quickly with approvals, because they rely on the Pfizer’s findings, while American regulators validate the results independently. The latter approach may have a secondary benefit when marketing the vaccine, as trust is paramount to a successful roll-out. How do we convince the nation to take the vaccine?

1 in 5 US Adults Do Not Intend to Get Vaccinated

In a Pew Research Poll released last week, 60% of Americans said they would “definitely” or “probably” get a vaccine. This is an improvement over skepticism earlier in the fall, over a rushed vaccine.  In September, Pew Research found only 50% of Americans surveyed said they would get the treatment.  Clearly the trial results from the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna full, late stage data showing a 95% effective rate resonated with the public.

A lab technician sorts blood samples for a Covid-19 vaccination study

Herd Immunity

As the virus continues to wreak havoc across the US, especially in the West and Midwest, “Covid-19 Dismissers” may be inching towards an acknowledgement of the science. According to Infectious Disease Expert Michael Osterholm, we will reach herd immunity when 60% of the population is immune. https://www.brookings.edu/opinions/want-herd-immunity-pay-people-to-take-the-vaccine/

With trial vaccines proving to be over 90% effective, that means about 70% of the US population (60 percent divided by 90%) must be vaccinated.  

Give Each Community Agency

As we manage the roll-out, work from the inside out, to give each community agency.  

Black adults are the most skeptical about the vaccine, and for good cause. In 1932, the federally run Tuskegee syphilis study of Black men, ostensibly slated for six months, lasted forty years, and allowed Black men to die of untreated syphilis, creating a lasting fall-out of trust.

A White House nurse prepares to administer the H1N1 vaccine to President Barack Obama at the White House on Sunday, Dec. 20, 2009. (Official White House photo by Pete Souza)

Former President Barack Obama said he would publicly take the vaccine. An article in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-vaccine-athletes-sports-early-11607215654 suggested athletes like LeBron James could also provide shade for the vaccine in the Black community. However, the Elvis lesson is still relevant. The Black community is not a monolithic group. Different approaches will resonate with different sectors. Combine trusted sources, with indisputable facts, along with compelling grassroots story-telling and community-based initiatives.  

Address Anti-Vaxxers with Respect and Facts

Another  headwind comes from anti-vaxxers who distrust government vaccines outright, and the vaccine hesitant, who are unconvinced the R & D is sound, and concerned about greedy pharma, like Perdue and the Sackler family, who fueled the opioid crisis, which cost the lives of over 500,000 people, many of them young.   

It is important not to marginalize them. Behavioral studies suggest Americans tend to be more interested in their personal security than in the collective good. Further, a study at Arizona State University in 2015, found the group exposed to vivid anecdotes about the ravages of a disease were more likely to change their attitudes towards vaccines. Social media will be an important distribution platform to reach this community, as their movement has been fueled online. Tech firms Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube need to remove posts and add warning labels to anti-vaccination posts containing clearly harmful information, while redirecting users to reliable sites.  

Join The Resistance

The rallying cry in the UK today was Join The Resistance. Here in the US, the Ad Council is mounting a $50 million campaign to convince Americans to get vaccinated. These are the folks who brought iconic national campaigns like Rosie the Riveter, Smokey the Bear, Friends Don’t Let Friends Drive Drunk, and more. However, Americans in 2020 have never been more skeptical, less trusting, and more difficult to reach. The approach of the Ad Council and others must be coordinated, layered, nuanced, and targeted – with underpinnings that are powerful, authentic, fact-based, and community endorsed.   To convince the nation to take the vaccine, will be the most important public service campaign of our time. All hands on deck.

Face Mask Fashion Follows Function

Until a vaccine is created to inoculate against COVID-19, it will be a tenuous toe dip back. The National Academies of Science, Technology and Medicine recently determined that viral droplets could travel farther than 6 feet in certain conditions and live coronavirus particles can persist in the air in bioaerosol form. https://www.nap.edu/catalog/25769/rapid-expert-consultation-on-the-possibility-of-bioaerosol-spread-of-sars-cov-2-for-the-covid-19-pandemic-april-1-2020.  In other words, in addition to social distancing and rigorous handwashing, wearing a cloth face covering was added to the prescriptive list of citizen mandates to help fight the spread. With a market potential of 328 million people in the US alone, the face mask will become the 2020 fashion statement.

In the beginning of the pandemic, with a horrifying shortage of PPE for front line medical workers, crafty and charitable Americans revved up their sewing machines, unearthed remnant cotton fabric and began stitching masks for local hospitals, nursing homes and first responders. But soon the need expanded to all public-facing essential workers. When the CDC changed its guidance to recommend all Americans wear a cloth face covering in public, and many states mandated it, a market was born.  Soon, the plethora of face masks included thongs, bandanas, and gas masks.     

“Face masks are the new t-shirt”

– Mariella Segarra

Seemingly overnight, face masks metamorphized from uncomfortable and awkward to personal and stylish. Mariella Segarra on NPR’s Marketplace suggested this was a new retail category.  https://www.marketplace.org/2020/04/24/cloth-face-mask-new-category-retail-covid19/  Right now, sports teams, causes and designers are seizing the moment to offer American’s a personalized approach to our new normal.

A Mask For Every Vertical

However, unlike a racoon, one mask does not fit all occasions. As the evolution of the mask continues, new verticals will emerge within the category. For business – a clear plastic shield to encourage transparency and teamwork, for fashion – fabulous fabrics and accessories, for kids, bright colors and beloved characters, and for sports, ultra-breathable virus- repellent fabric. New Balance pivoted to fill the PPE void for hospital workers. You can bet their fabric engineers and designers are developing masks for all types of athletes. And, if casual Fridays don’t become an anomaly, why not a jean version as well?

Masks are here to stay. After wearing a suffocating, glasses-fogging, beginning-to-smell-a-bit-stale mask for the past few weeks, I am ready to help jump start the economy and shop. Think something with big, funny lips would bring smiles.

Zoom Into March Madness

Who could have anticipated when I posted my last blog on Thursday, February 20th, that COVID-19 would explode in Italy – from a handful of cases on Friday, February 21st to hundreds of cases by Monday, February 24th.  In the space of 72 hours, the world was on the precipice of a frightening, new normal.

After blogging about the 2020’s becoming the great age of content due to the proliferation of paid streaming services, who would have conceived that free streaming would become a powerful connector in a socially distanced, shelter-at-home, world. Zoom…. literally into March Madness

The US and much of the world underwent forced hibernation this week. Chris Martin of the band Cold Play, inspired artists like John Legend, Keith Urban, Rob Thomas and Pink to follow his lead by performing and streaming live mini gigs from their homes to distract and delight live, worldwide audiences, some numbering over 500,000, who watched and interacted from their couches. https://www.instagram.com/tv/B90Ft_knpuT/?utm_source=ig_embed

Companies sent employees home to work, and business bumped along with Brady Bunch streaming conference services like Zoom. Zoomers – Boomers, X’ers, Millennials and Z’ers pulled back the curtain of their private lives in their home “studios.” The challenge for Boomer Zoomers was complementary lighting, while Z Zoomers wondered about screen- appropriate attire, and for Millennial and Gen Z Zoomers, it was where to stash the kids. And everyone looked more critically for the right backdrop – as over-the-shoulder peeking became a fun diversion.

Even live television embraced this streaming phenomenon, with talent reporting from kitchens and study’s as they self-isolated. Jimmy Kimmel streamed “quarantine minilogues” from his family room. Tonight, he interviews his wife and kids. The Today Show’s Al Roker forecasted the weather from his kitchen, while his wife, Deborah Roberts, shot her 20/20 segments from the living room.   

As a world and a country, we were strangely more isolated before this week. Sharing comfy couches and kitchen tables, while bringing the world home, has underscored our common humanity. In the midst of COVID-19 Madness, while our borders are closed, streaming has opened our doors, and reminded us, we are all in this together.