Rumours, mistrust hinder Brazil yellow fever vaccine campaign
SAO PAULO — Elisangela Santos doesn’t understand why everyone in her neighbourhood on the outskirts of Sao Paulo is being told to get vaccinated for yellow fever this year. Yellow fever has long been endemic in parts of Brazil, and she smells a rat.
“Every year, it’s something else,” the 44-year-old school custodian said as she waiting recently outside a health post in the Jardim Miriam district. “They invent another thing to make Brazilians spend money.”
The vaccine is free at public health posts around the country, but Santos’ suspicion that someone must be profiting somewhere is typical of the current high levels of mistrust Brazilians hold for officialdom. Flagging faith in Brazil’s institutions amid a series of corruption scandals, a chaotic communications campaign promoting the vaccine, and the country’s decision to give partial doses to stretch supplies are contributing to rumours that the vaccine is a scam, weak or even dangerous.
That misinformation is scaring people away from the campaign that is trying to vaccinate more than 23 million people in areas of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Bahia states that until recently were not considered at risk for yellow fever. Nearly six weeks into the campaign, the Health Ministry says 76 per cent of the target population has been vaccinated — far off its goal of 95 per cent.


