MSU researchers on vaccine hesitancy and respectfully educating citizens

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It takes only one case of measles or other vaccine-preventable diseases for an outbreak to begin. 
 
But vaccines can prevent or lessen the severity of conditions for everyone, according to Peter Gulick, professor of Osteopathic Medical Specialties at the Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine  and Sean Valles, professor and director of the MSU College of Human Medicine’s Center for Bioethics and Social Justice
 
Gulick and Valles discuss the disinformation that leads to vaccine hesitancy and share respectful ways to educate citizens on the health benefits of vaccines.   
 
Conversation Highlights:
 
(0:50) – Gulick on his time at MSU and research interests.
 
(2:45) – Valles on his time at MSU, research interests and the Center’s mission.
 
(5:13) – Some history of vaccines and their acceptance. What about anti-biotics? How are vaccines like fighting computer viruses?
 
(9:30) – To what do you attribute the rise in vaccine hesitancy? “It’s really more of a spectrum of hesitancy.”
 
(14:21) – How do we break through some of the misinformation and get more people to see the health benefits of vaccines? Simple, direct and respectful education is key.
 
(17:19) – What about herd immunity? “It’s not about what you have to do, but what is right to do.”
 
(21:01) – Sean’s takeaways. “Invest in prevention.”
 
(22:01) – “Respect each patient you deal with.”
 
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Creators and Guests

Russ White
Host
Russ White
I host and produce MSU Today for News/Talk 760 @wjrradio and @MichiganStateU's @NPR affiliate @WKAR News/Talk 102.3 FM and AM 870.
MSU researchers on vaccine hesitancy and respectfully educating citizens
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