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Although more than five years have passed since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, the resulting vaccine vaccine still endures to this day, which is a professor Margie Danchin promises to help solve.
Pediatrician of the Royal Children’s Hospital de Melbourne, Australia, Danchin is also an expert in vaccines at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI), also in Melbourne.
His biggest focus, he told Fox News Digital, is to fight the erosion of vaccine confidence at a time when technology is moving forward, and when the need for these advances to combat emerging childhood diseases (and reappears).
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A primary example of this technology, according to Danchin, is the new maternal vaccination against the RSV (syncitial respiratory virus) and the treatment of RSV monoclonal antibodies for newborns, called Nisevimab.
These are new and effective weapons against a disease that is a major global cause of children’s pneumonia and the hospitalization of newborns.
In Australia, children’s vaccination rates fall in many areas, reflecting other regions of the United States and around the world. (Istock)
In West Australia and Queensland, Danchin said, Nisevimab has caused a decrease of 80% of RSV hospitalizations.
Fox News Digital spoke to Danchin about this paradox among the new exciting prevention tools and the reluctance to use them.
In Australia, children’s vaccination rates fall in many areas, reflecting other regions of the United States and around the world.
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“We have the lowest levels of trust in all vaccines in more than a decade, and in fact we have had global reductions in the vaccine coverage for children in particular,” said Danchin.
He also pointed to climbing diseases that can be predictable in the vaccine, such as diphtheria, polyomyelitis, cough and measles.
Professor Danchin’s research focuses on the vaccine vaccine and what needs to be done in this regard.

“We have the lowest levels of trust in all vaccines in more than a decade, and in fact we have had global reductions in covering the vaccine for children in particular,” said the pediatrician. (Istock)
“Many levels have to be dealt with,” he said.
Some of the most important factors, according to the doctor, are visions of the world of people, perceptions and understanding of risk, as well as the cognitive biases they use to interpret this risk.
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“We saw Covid’s release, when there were adverse events associated with vaccines, people became incredibly fearful for them, although the real risk that took place was incredibly low, very rare,” said Danchin.
The doctor aims to address patients’ concerns, while also relying on.

The pediatrician noted the effectiveness of the new maternal vaccination against the RSV (syncitial respiratory virus) and the treatment with monoclonal RSV antibodies for newborns, called Nisevimab. (Istock)
One of the strategies is the Vaccine Champions Program, which has been deployed in Australia and five countries in the Asia region and Pacific.
“We build capacity and form health suppliers and various community leaders, including religious leaders, teachers and sports stars, on how to communicate on vaccines,” said Danchin.
The doctor said that storytelling can also be an effective way to convey the importance of vaccines.
He said he strives to establish as “someone with knowledge and experience and credibility”, while at the same time respectful and guarantees that parents feel that their concerns feel.
“I build the relationship and then spend time addressing these concerns and sharing trust information,” said Danchin.
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He is also dedicated to discussing diseases themselves.
“I think we spend too much time focusing on vaccines, which have become a victim of their own success,” said Danchin. “Parents forget why we vaccinate and what are the diseases we try to prevent our children.”

“Parents forget why we vaccinate and what are the diseases we try to prevent our children,” Danchin said. (Istock)
Above all, Danchin said, it is important that people have access to trust sources of information instead of “Echo Chambers”, where they read and share information that may not be accurate or well provided.
“We need trusted scientists who can really communicate,” said Danchin.
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Danchin emphasized that most people are not smart on this topic: “They are very confused. They don’t know what to believe.”
It is important to be respectful of the opinions of others and to “invite open conversation,” the doctor said.
“If you censure the information, people are distrustful,” he said, saying that conversations must be kept “clearly, without aggression or judgment.”
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Danchin also said he strives to dissipate persistent concerns between some parents about the possible bond between certain vaccines and autism.
To achieve it, listen to parents’ concerns, and then “gently shares” the 25 years of research that reject this association, he said.
“I think we spend too much time focusing on vaccines, which have become a victim of their own success.”
“Just because you have a vaccine and, in the next four to six months, the skills and behavior of your child’s communication, does not mean that X caused and,” Danchin said.
“If you have a banana and then you have a reaction, it does not mean that the reaction is to eat the banana.”
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During the pandemic, Danchin said, there were many cases where people considered that if an elderly person had a vaccine against the cube and then died a week later, it was clearly the vaccine that killed, although it could have been due to a stroke or heart attack.
“So this is what I do with families; I gently explain the research. I show them that there is no test absolutely,” he said.

“Just because you have a vaccine and, in the next four to six months, the skills and behavior of your child’s communication, does not mean that X caused and,” the pediatrician said. (Istock)
“There have been millions of children who did not receive the MMR vaccine and others who received it, and there have been no differences in the incidence of autism.”
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Danchin aims to approach parents “clearly, without aggression, without judgment and through a land approach.”
At the same time, the doctor said that she and her fellow researchers “are constantly watching the side effects of the vaccine (or the safety concerns of the vaccine) in the community.”
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