People are celebrating their COVID-19 vaccine shots with selfies. Some think it's time to give it a rest - Action News
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ScienceAnalysis

People are celebrating their COVID-19 vaccine shots with selfies. Some think it's time to give it a rest

Some health-care professionals believe vaccine selfies posted to social media are a good way to promote and normalize the COVID-19 vaccine. But others say they may be a source of irritation and anxiety among those who have not yet received a shot.

Doctor describes selfies as 'rubbing salt in the wound' to those who haven't been vaccinated

Dr. Tim Myers takes a selfie while receiving a COVID-19 vaccine in Nashville, Tenn. (Andrew Nelles/The Tennessean/The Associated Press)

Initially, Dr. Alan Drummond welcomed the idea of the so-called vaccine selfie people sharing their COVID-19 vaccinationpictures on social media as acelebration and triumphof science over disease.

But the Perth, Ont., emergency room physician soon soured on the trendand began resenting the action as an insensitive reminder to those in the medical community,particularly in rural areas where he practices, that theyhadnot yet received the shot.

"It was kind of rubbing a little bit of salt into our wounds as we watched health-care administrators, hospital administrators, PR officials, government officials getting vaccinations while we were still very much in the dark," he said.

"The idea of the celebratory selfie started to wear a little thin when, you know, a month, six weeks into the vaccination process, we were still across the country, largely ignored."

While vaccine selfies may be the new social media trend, people like Drummondbelievesuch postsmay be causing irritation, resentfulness and anxiety among those whohave not yet been inoculated.

Last month, the WashingtonPost published a story titledTo selfie or not to selfie? Why the joy of getting vaccinated is drawing backlash. Itcited aBoston Globe opinion columntitledCool it with the vaccine selfies for a while. In it, authorMiles Howard questioned whether such posts were causing irritation.

"Will they bring us together as we aspire for mass vaccination, or will they leave people feeling sidelined during the deadly and terrifying final chapter of the pandemic," Howard asked in the column.

Have nots vs. have lots

In January, Dr. Karim Ali,an assistant clinical professor at McMaster University, co-authoreda Toronto Star opinion piece titledWhy we are not posting our vaccine selfies.

He said the piece was prompted, in part, because vaccinations were just rolling out at that time, andmany hard hit areas hadn't yet received their vaccines.

"We would see people posting [their vaccinations]on social media, and specifically non health-care workers.Itjust created a sense of have nots and have lots," hetold CBC News.

Even though the rate ofvaccinations hasincreasedsince the column was published, Ali said he still wouldn't post a selfie.

"There are stillpeople who are considered high risk and their turnhasn't come up," he said. "So that's why, if you wantto [post a selfie] maybe think twice"

Dr. Zain Chagla,an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph's Healthcare in Hamiltonwho also co-authored the Star column, said he worries about the "downstream effects" of posting such a selfie.

"I worry about the people that are sitting there in complete fear of COVID. They are just saying, 'Well, I'm feeling even more fearful and down because my colleagues across the border are getting it andI don't even have a shot for another six months.'

"I think people need to realize that as you start pushing that self promotion out there, that equity feeling does start.People are happy [for those who are vaccinated] but are anxious in their own world wondering when their turn is going to come."

Dr. Ben Huang, whochronicled other concerns about vaccine selfies for an articlein The Conversation,said he refrained from posting about his own vaccination, and that he was somewhatself conscious about provoking jealousy or anxiety among others.

However, Huang said he may have reconsidered if many of his friends were vaccine hesitant.

Normalize the experience

For health experts likeSamantha Yammine,a neuroscientist and science communicator, combatting vaccine hesitancy is why she's such an advocate for posting vaccine selfies, which she believeshelp normalize the experience.

"We know that hesitancy begets hesitancy and similarly, confidence begets confidence. So if people are posting a selfie and that's going to make other people want to [get vaccinated] even moreeven if they're frustrated they can't get it right awaythat is a positive."

"There's a multi-billion dollar influencer industry because we know that posts on social media can influence behaviour," Yamminesaid.

She referred to anexperiment conducted byFacebook during the 2010 U.S. Congressionalelections that found an increase in those willing to vote after finding out another Facebook friend had voted.

Dr. Samantha Yammine believes vaccine selfies can help influence others to get the COVID-19 shot. (Michael Barker)

She said there's "pretty good evidence" that seeing people in your close network model a certain type of behaviour might influence you to then have that behaviour as well.

"We need more positive association with getting vaccinated. And seeing your friend excited about getting vaccinated, smiling through their mask, posting and celebrating the caption with that picture is now giving people a positive association with vaccination that will save lives."

While Yamminesaid she can understand the frustration of those who have yet to be vaccinated, "we need to stop treating other people getting vaccinated as an insult personally."

"This is not a personal health crisis. It is a public health threat."

'A selfie is a little story'

Timothy Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in health law and policy at the University of Alberta, agreed that the bigger issue is aroundvaccine hesitancy.

He said there is good evidence that sharing stories about yourself that resonate with your community can have an impact on vaccination rates.

"Aselfie is a little story," Caulfieldsaid. "It's a little story about you getting vaccinated, you're celebrating the science, you're celebrating this moment and you're normalizing the behaviour.

"So I think in the aggregate, it is worthwhile. I think that itshould be encouraged," he said.

"I understand this idea that people will find it grating, you know, frustrating. 'Ican't get a vaccine. How come this person got it?' I get that."

However, he said concerns about vaccinehesitancy far outweighconcerns that people would find vaccine selfies annoying.

Doctors Drummond and Ali still questionedjust how effective a selfiefrom the average personwould beat convincing others to get a shot. But they did acknowledge a celebrity vaccine selfie may have an effect.

Chagla said instead of selfies, he would encourage people who've been vaccinated to speak tofriends and neighbours who might be hesitant.

"I think, for every 100 selfies, having five minutes to actually talk about the vaccine is probably a whole lot better in that sense."