US HHS vaccination ads use a new tactic to increase Covid-19 vaccination rates: fear - "The ads are part of a $250 million HHS Covid-19 public education campaign."

With vaccination rates only inching forward slowly, the federal government is trying a new marketing tactic: fear.

In a set of emotional advertisements releasing Wednesday morning, three unvaccinated Covid-19 survivors and an intensive care unit nurse speak about the toll the virus has taken.

It's a sharp turn from earlier ads, which used positive messages -- protecting the community, getting back to normal activities, reuniting with friends -- to convince hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves.

The new ads show in stark terms the real-life consequences of not getting vaccinated.

"When you pair that with optimism and a way to take action -- vaccination -- to avoid the negative consequences, you can really make a positive impact," said a senior official with the US Department of Health and Human Services who was involved with the ad campaign.

Public opinion experts praised the advertisements, saying it was time to take a new approach -- one that uses the death and misery many Americans are witnessing firsthand.

"Real experiences, more than information, seem to be moving people, and here we have these messages enforcing that real experience," said Drew Altman, president and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which tracks public opinion on vaccination.

Kaiser's recent polling has found that knowing someone who became seriously ill from Covid-19 or died from the virus are among the most powerful factors motivating vaccine hesitant Americans to take a shot.

The ads are part of a $250 million HHS Covid-19 public education campaign.

 "We believe these first-person accounts of people who've experienced Covid firsthand can really underscore the danger that COVID-19 poses," the HHS official said. "[It's] really changing the messenger. We're letting real people tell their own stories in their own words."

'They gave me a five percent chance of living'​


The first set of HHS's Covid-19 vaccination ads debuted in April and were professionally shot and featured heartwarming scenes of friends hugging and children together on sleepovers, with upbeat music playing in the background.

"Go on and live as you want, feel the sunlight on your face," the singer croons in one ad, as text appears on the screen: "After a year of saying no, imagine how good yes is going to feel."

While that might have convinced some people to get vaccinated, it didn't work for everyone. Vaccination rates started to lag last spring, and currently nearly 1 in 4 eligible Americans still has not had a Covid-19 vaccination, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The new batch of ads is much rougher.

The HHS official said their recent research shows that testimonials from people affected by Covid-19 appeal to the unvaccinated, and so they went on social media and found selfie videos from two survivors and an intensive care unit nurse.

"I've been in the hospital for 76 days now," says a man named Terrell from St. Louis. He wears a hospital gown and has a canula supplying oxygen to his nose, as the ad cuts to images of him lying lifeless in a hospital bed covered with wires and tubes. "They gave me a five percent chance of living."

 "Two months ago, I contracted the Delta variant of Covid-19.  I haven't been the same man since," a man named Kole from Monett, Missouri, says in his selfie video.

Felicia, an ICU nurse from Shreveport, Louisiana, tears up as she talks about caring for young people with Covid-19.

"The Delta wave that we're seeing now -- people are younger and sicker and we're intubating and losing people that are my age and younger," she says.

The ads feel raw, and there's no peppy music.

"Our direction to the creative team was not to not to improve them, to not take the shake out of the camera," the HHS official said. "The reason for that is because we wanted these to be as authentic as possible."

HHS did send a film crew to one of the Covid-19 survivors. The fourth ad features Amanda in Richwood, Ohio, and shows her at home with her family.

"I got COVID, I was intubated, and in a coma for 11 days," she says directly to the camera. "I did not get the Covid vaccine. I was concerned about some of the side effects. However, if I had it to do over, I would definitely go get the Covid vaccine. I know that I was very close to death. The fact that I almost did not come home to my husband and to my children is terrifying."

Fifteen second and 30 second versions of the ads will appear on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest and Nextdoor. They'll also appear on national television, with a focus on areas that have low vaccination rates.



Choosing the approach that resonates​



In any public health campaign, the creators have a choice: feature the benefits of a particular intervention, such as vaccination, or feature the consequences of not using that intervention.

For many months, the news media has featured stories of unvaccinated people who became ill with Covid-19 and regretted their decision, or stories of family members who lost unvaccinated loved ones to the virus.

But the HHS official said research earlier this year showed this was not the best approach for motiving vaccine hesitant Americans.

"We have to make sure that if we're putting a piece of creative, a piece of information out into the world, that we're not going to make the situation worse," the official said. "As people are making up their mind about something, the use of fear can actually work both ways."

Lori Freeman, the CEO of the National Association of County and City Health Officials, says she thinks these ads will have an impact, given what she's heard from her members, who have been on the ground for months trying to convince vaccine hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves.

"I think this resonates more than 'let's sing kumbaya together and go to a concert together,' " Freeman said. "It's a better approach to say 'this is what you need to do to keep yourself alive' rather than 'this is how to help the world.' "

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Imagine thinking wealth matters when your streets are literally covered in shit and used needles. Rather live in a hole than a shit hole.
Have you fucking seen the streets of NY? Please tell me how wonderfully clean they are.
Lol Fauci been around since the 80's in the same position you dumb faggot.
Trump could've gotten rid of him, ergo, he supported what Fauci did, sorry.
 
Retard conservatives went down to Home Depot and bought horse paste, and died from getting it. Sorry your side's stupidity is so embarassing
I know you’re the resident devil’s advocate posted but this part is weak even by those standards;
I guarantee you more people have died from the vaccine, even per capita, than have died from getting Ivermectin from tractor supply. You’d need to inject that stuff into your carotid to do anymore the puke it up or have a case of the Ralphs and get dehydrated. Ivermectin might not be a meaningful preventative medicine, but out of the two medicines that might not help you at all, ivermectin is safer than a covid vaccine.
 
I know you’re the resident devil’s advocate posted but this part is weak even by those standards;
I guarantee you more people have died from the vaccine, even per capita, than have died from getting Ivermectin from tractor supply. You’d need to inject that stuff into your carotid to do anymore the puke it up or have a case of the Ralphs and get dehydrated. Ivermectin might not be a meaningful preventative medicine, but out of the two medicines that might not help you at all, ivermectin is safer than a covid vaccine.
One is preventative, and therefore by medical definition better. The vaccine is a safer and cheaper option, being, y'know, free. Ivermectin can help when infected, but why take that chance and have to waste money on a ventilator? Unless you just blindly say the vaccine doesn't work, which it does.
 
One is preventative, and therefore by medical definition better. The vaccine is a safer and cheaper option, being, y'know, free. Ivermectin can help when infected, but why take that chance and have to waste money on a ventilator? Unless you just blindly say the vaccine doesn't work, which it does.
The vaccine can’t both be the safer option and be a direct cause of more deaths and injuries than ivermectin: being free is irrelevant to its safety.
 
The vaccine can’t both be the safer option and be a direct cause of more deaths and injuries than ivermectin: being free is irrelevant to its safety.
This is like saying Chemo causes more deaths than Advil. One is just on an entirely different level and does way more than a simply anti parasitic drug. Vaccination prevents spread and helps medical systems more than merely a bandaid to help Joe Clark who's come in the third time in a row for getting Covid and not caring.
 
I just saw one of these ads on YouTube, and that bitch was so fat, she'd be better off dead of covid than trapped in the prison of crippling flab she's eaten herself into.
 
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Two can play at this game
 
I keep on getting dumb emails at work about vaccine mythbusters. It's the funniest thing I have ever seen! Sadly, still work there if I didn't I would defiantly post them here.
 
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I keep on getting dumb emails at work about vaccine mythbusters. It's the funniest thing I have ever seen! Sadly, still work there if I didn't I would defiantly post them here.

Yeah I've seen those myself, they are like the shittiest saddest strawmen and they act like people really believe the super wacky shit instead of the very reasonable fears they have.
 
Ew Manhattan, god that's nasty. Try and cover yourself shit for brains, you live in a fuckin' scum hole.
Jelly much? You couldn't pay me to live in poo covered SF and the dumpster fire that Cali has become, because of fags like you that sold it to Chinese speculators and almond farms.

NYC has no pretensions about what it is, a city of the ultra wealthy. It's not pretty but at least its honest about what it is whereas California fags think they're better than everyone else and that California's special. Protip, it isn't, it's actually the worst place to live.
 
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