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Five years of COVID vaccines: how a breakthrough created a public-heath crisis

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Almost 14 billion COVID-19 vaccines have been delivered since the first jab was officially rolled out on 8 December 2020.Credit: Paula Bronstein/Getty

On 8 December 2020, a 90-year-old British woman became the first person in the world to receive a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. Five years on, more than 13.64 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered. Thanks to the rapid roll-out of these vaccines, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that COVID-19 was no longer a public health emergency in May 2023.

The global response to the COVID-19 pandemic was a turning point for public health — but the downstream effects haven’t all been positive, argues Kristen Panthagani, a physician at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut. In March 2020, Panthagani started a newsletter called You Can Know Things, which originally focused on addressing rumours and myths about COVID-19 vaccines and public-health measures. It now explores how the miscommunication of science and health measures has damaged public trust in vaccines and scientific research.

Nature spoke with Panthagani about what public-health institutions can learn from the pandemic, and how they can rebuild trust in science.

Looking back at the past five years, what lessons have been learnt from the COVID-19 pandemic?

The pandemic was a steep learning curve. Nobody in our generation had ever encountered anything like that before and we must remember what we were dealing with at the time. It’s easy to beat ourselves up looking back, but it’s important that we look at what we can learn from that time and how we can do better going forwards.

Public trust in science has declined since COVID — virologists need to unite around safety standards

Unfortunately, we’ve seen declining trust in childhood vaccines since the pandemic. The miscommunication and distrust over COVID-19 vaccines and mandates has influenced the uptake of other vaccines. The United States is now at risk of losing its elimination status for measles, and that is directly related to vaccine coverage. Once measles vaccination drops below 95%, we start to lose herd immunity. If that were to happen, I think it would be a clear sign of this declining trust in vaccines.

We also have to consider declining access to vaccines in many parts of the world, and the challenges people have getting health-care coverage.

What happened during the pandemic that eroded people’s trust in vaccines?

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