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  2. COVID-19 vaccine misinformation and hesitancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_vaccine...

    Many news articles, TV interviews and posts on social media appeared in 2021 to highlight either the anger of individuals whose children or immune compromised family members either caught COVID-19 or were impacted by vaccine hesitancy or those who were vaccine hesitant and later tested positive.

  3. Powhatan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powhatan

    Various tribes each held some individual powers locally, and each had a chief known as a weroance (male) or, more rarely, a weroansqua (female), meaning "commander". [13]As early as the era of John Smith, the individual tribes of this grouping were recognized by English colonists as falling under the greater authority of the centralized power led by the chiefdom of Powhatan (c. 1545 – c ...

  4. Vaccine misinformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine_misinformation

    The World Health Organization has classified vaccine related misinformation into five topic areas. These are: threat of disease (vaccine preventable diseases are harmless), trust (questioning the trustworthiness of healthcare authorities who administer vaccines), alternative methods (such as alternative medicine to replace vaccination), effectiveness (vaccines do not work) and safety (vaccines ...

  5. COVID-19 misinformation by governments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_misinformation_by...

    On 22 June, the BIRN (Balkan Investigative Reporting Network) released an official document from the government's COVID-19 database stating that from 19 March to 1 June, there were 632 COVID-19-related deaths, compared to 244–388 more than officially reported. The database also showed there to have been more new daily cases, between 300 and ...

  6. COVID-19 vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_vaccine

    How COVID‑19 vaccines work. The video shows the process of vaccination, from injection with RNA or viral vector vaccines, to uptake and translation, and on to immune system stimulation and effect. Part of a series on the COVID-19 pandemic Scientifically accurate atomic model of the external structure of SARS-CoV-2. Each "ball" is an atom. COVID-19 (disease) SARS-CoV-2 (virus) Cases Deaths ...

  7. History of COVID-19 vaccine development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_COVID-19...

    In December 2020, the CHMP started a rolling review of the Ad26.COV2.S COVID‑19 vaccine from Janssen-Cilag International N.V. [143] On 21 December 2020, the CHMP recommended granting a conditional marketing authorization for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID‑19 vaccine, Comirnaty (active ingredient tozinameran), developed by BioNTech and Pfizer.

  8. Deployment of COVID-19 vaccines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Deployment_of_COVID-19_vaccines

    Favored distribution of vaccines within one or a few select countries, called "vaccine sovereignty", is a criticism of some of the vaccine development partnerships, [39] [42] such as for the AstraZeneca-University of Oxford vaccine candidate, concerning whether there may be [needs update] prioritized distribution first within the UK and to the ...

  9. COVID-19 misinformation by the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_misinformation_by...

    A 2020 study by researchers from Northeastern, Harvard, Northwestern and Rutgers universities found that older registered voters of all political orientations shared more COVID-19 stories from fake news websites on Twitter, with Republicans over the age of 65 being the most likely to share COVID-19 stories from fake news websites. [104]