Key Messages and Answers about Vaccine Safety. Manual for Health Care Workers
Date
2021Document Number
PAHO/FPL/IM/COVID-19/21-0027
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Health workers are among a community’s most reliable sources of information on immunization. The purpose of this publication is to provide them with information they can use to respond to frequently asked—and sometimes difficult— questions about vaccination. These pages also review the myths and negative rumors that have been circulating about the regular vaccination program and COVID-19 vaccines. This manual supplements Communicating about Vaccine Safety: Guidelines to help health workers communicate with parents, caregivers, and patients, published by the Pan American Health Organization.
Subject
Collections
This notice should be preserved along with the article's original URL.Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Pan American Health Organization; Office of the Subregional Program Coordination, Caribbean (CPC) (PAHOUnited StatesWashington, D.C., 2021)The Caribbean has a long history of being a global leader in immunization, and one of the key factors contributing to this success has been the commitment and dedication of healthcare workers in promoting the benefits of ...
-
Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Health Workers Regarding COVID-19 Vaccines in Latin America Pan American Health Organization; Family, Health Promotion and Life Course (FPL) (PAHOUnited StatesWashington, D.C., 2023)Health workers play an essential role in vaccination, as they generate confidence in the population. However, they are also at risk of receiving misinformation about vaccines, not least because of the current context of ...
-
Pan American Health Organization; Family, Health Promotion and Life Course (FPL) (PAHOUnited StatesWashington, D.C., 2020)Vaccines save between 2 million and 3 million lives each year and protect the entire population from more than a dozen life-threatening diseases. Thanks to vaccination, smallpox was eradicated in 1980, and we are on track ...