Delta variant, Louisiana doctors, slowly cracking vaccine resistance
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[August 09, 2021]
By Brad Brooks
PONCHATOULA, La. (Reuters) - The crowd
inside Floyd's Family Pharmacy was abuzz with an agitated energy.
Whether arriving for scheduled COVID vaccines or testing, people were
motivated in part by fear of the Delta variant taking hold across the
country as well as in this stately town surrounded by lush forests,
strawberry fields and swamps an hour north of New Orleans.
Head pharmacist Floyd Talley was at the center of the action, one minute
donning full protective gear to carry out nasal swabs in the parking
lot. The next, he was back in his white jacket, fielding questions from
moms about possible COVID symptoms their children displayed.
"There is a huge uptick in the request for vaccines," Talley said.
"We're back almost to how we were when the vaccine first came out."
Those lining up for jabs say many reasons had made them reluctant
before, including questions about approval by the Food and Drug
Administration and the loss of a sense of urgency when cases earlier
started to fall. Other areas with low rates of vaccination - Louisiana
has one of the lowest in the country - would be wise to recognize that
motives can be mixed, doctors here said, and find innovative ways to
address concerns.
Nobody in Ponchatoula is even considering a vaccine mandate - that would
likely lead to a counterproductive backlash in this deeply conservative
patch of a deeply red state.
Instead, local leaders have made it less convenient to pass up
vaccination with such measures as a recent schools' directive that
unvaccinated teachers and students exposed to the virus would be forced
to quarantine, with teachers not receiving any extra sick days as they
did last year.
Louisiana State University said unvaccinated students would have to
provide monthly proof of a negative coronavirus test. Pharmacist Talley
said the prospect of that regular inconvenience prompted a rush of
college kids to start coming for the vaccine.
While none of these measures is as straightforward and forceful as
doctors in the area might want, they say they are beginning to have an
impact.
Tangipahoa Parish, where Ponchatoula is located, has seen four straight
weeks of double-digit percent gains in the number of people being
vaccinated. With just 30.4% of its population fully vaccinated, it has a
long way to go.
STEADFAST AGAINST THE SHOT
Penny Perrin was part of the crowd inside Floyd's recently.
She said the Delta variant definitely got her attention, but it was the
idea of having her daughter Gracie, 13, and son Jacob, 15, forced into
extended quarantines and missing long stretches of school if exposed
that prompted her to bring the kids in.
"The vaccinated can still get sick, though I know a lot less. And this
shot was developed so fast that we feel like guinea pigs," Perrin said.
"But they may get sick and miss school if they don't have the shot. I
feel like I'm damned if I do and damned if I don't. But we're getting
it."
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Dr. Robert Peltier, the chief medical officer for North Oaks Health
System, poses for a portrait as cases of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) surge in Hammond, Louisiana, U.S., August 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
While COVID-19 vaccines were developed at record
pace, the process was based on decades of research and involved
scientists all over the world.
Just up the road from Ponchatoula in Hammond, an exhausted Dr.
Robert Peltier, North Oaks Health System's chief medical officer,
lamented the long and mostly futile fight to convince his fellow
"famously steadfast" Louisiana natives to get vaccinated.
He said shaming or labeling rural conservatives as ignorant was
ineffectual, and described complacency and timing as key factors too
easily disregarded. When the vaccines first came out, many people
were not eligible. By the time they were, the threat posed by COVID
did not seem as dire.
"The masks mandates went away. People were able to go on vacations.
So everybody thought this was over," Peltier said. "Understandably
and logically, a percentage of our population thought, 'I didn't get
COVID before. I didn't get a vaccine before. Everything is opening
up. Why do I need to get a vaccine now?'"
The fight has been in-house at North Oaks, the largest healthcare
provider in Tangipahoa Parish. A week ago the number of North Oaks
staff who were vaccinated stood at just 43%. By Friday that number
had shot up to nearly 64%.
Hailey Warner, 20, was in North Oaks on Thursday getting a COVID
test.
"My mom had COVID recently, and I was around her, so that brought me
in," she said.
Warner said she was not yet vaccinated, in part out of fear it might
affect her fertility. The CDC has repeatedly advised that such
concerns are not backed by scientific evidence, but doctors in this
part of Louisiana say they have heard many young women citing
misinformation they have seen on social media linking the vaccines
to infertility.
Warner also said she was concerned by the lack of full FDA approval.
Dana Antoon, who owns eight pharmacies in the Ponchatoula area, said
the fact that it has taken longer than expected for COVID vaccines
to receive full FDA approval, as opposed to being authorized for
emergency use, has sown far more mistrust than she thinks leaders
understand.
"I strongly believe that once they get full FDA approval, we'll see
a big increase in vaccination demand," she said.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks; Additional reporting by Anurag Maan in
Bengaluru; Editing by Donna Bryson and Daniel Wallis)
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