{"id":567,"date":"2021-09-12T09:51:01","date_gmt":"2021-09-12T09:51:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/vaccination-discourse\/?p=567"},"modified":"2022-08-18T07:06:37","modified_gmt":"2022-08-18T07:06:37","slug":"from-roast-dinners-to-seatbelts-metaphors-to-address-covid-19-vaccine-hesitancy-by-elena-semino","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/vaccination-discourse\/2021\/09\/12\/from-roast-dinners-to-seatbelts-metaphors-to-address-covid-19-vaccine-hesitancy-by-elena-semino\/","title":{"rendered":"From roast dinners to seatbelts: Metaphors to address Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy – by Elena Semino"},"content":{"rendered":"

Professor Sarah Gilbert, who led the team that developed the Oxford Astrazeneca vaccine against Covid-19, has recently made this comment about different attitudes towards vaccines:<\/p>\n

I don\u2019t understand anti-vaxxers. Why should anyone be ideologically opposed to a safe and cost-effective public health measure that saves millions of lives and stops people from having to live with the long-term disabilities that can be caused by diseases such as polio and smallpox \u2013 and, it seems, Covid-19?<\/p>\n

[\u2026] Vaccine hesitancy, however, is a different matter. It is natural that people want to understand the risks and benefits of vaccines, and important that as scientists we engage with their concerns. (Vaxxers<\/a><\/em>, by Sarah Gilbert and Catherine Green, 2021, p. 192)<\/p>\n

One of the ways in which Gilbert and her co-author of the 2021 book Vaxxers<\/em>, Dr Catherine Green, engage with those concerns is through metaphors. Many other scientists, science writers and health professionals have done the same.<\/p>\n

Metaphors(1)<\/sup> make it possible to talk and think about abstract, complex and unfamiliar phenomena in terms of different phenomena that are more image-rich, clear-cut and accessible. In the case of Covid-19 vaccines, metaphors drawn from everyday experiences such as cooking roast dinners or wearing seatbelts in cars have been used to explain two specific aspects that can cause concern or confusion:<\/p>\n