<p>Disinformation around Covid vaccines has existed as long as the jabs themselves.</p>.<p>Unverified studies, unproven claims and out-of-context data are regularly shared on websites and social media across the globe -- fuelling dangerous myths about the virus and the vaccines.</p>.<p>As Austria becomes the first European Union country to make vaccines mandatory this week, AFP looks at some common disinformation surrounding the jabs:</p>.<p>A common concern about the Covid vaccines is that they can cause harm, or even death, to those who get them.</p>.<p>Some websites claim to link health risks to the jabs. Others offer information that is then used by people as alleged proof that vaccines are dangerous.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/vaccination-vs-punishment-how-jab-mandates-divide-1076434.html" target="_blank">Vaccination vs punishment: How jab mandates divide</a></strong></p>.<p>The US Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is a database that reports alleged harm caused by vaccines.</p>.<p>The website is open to the public, and anyone can submit a report.</p>.<p>But VAERS makes it clear that it cannot be used as proof of vaccine harm.</p>.<p>"A VAERS report does not necessarily mean that a vaccine caused the health problem, only that the symptoms occurred after vaccination," it says in its search engine training video.</p>.<p>If a symptom occurs after vaccination, it does not necessarily mean that the symptom occurred as a result of the vaccination -- a matter of causation versus chronology.</p>.<p>The VAERS site makes it clear that reports "may contain information that is incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental, or unverifiable".</p>.<p>But VAERS data has been used by French politician Martine Wonner to claim 54 American children had died as a result of Covid jabs.</p>.<p>Wonner used the data to argue that French children should not be vaccinated.</p>.<p>Leading medical bodies in the United States and Europe have said that rare side effects can occur as a result of some of the vaccines -- blood clots or myocarditis, for example -- but that the benefits of taking the jabs outweigh the risks.</p>.<p>Other common medical myths have no scientific proof but persist, for example that the vaccines can weaken the immune system, cause infertility or modify our DNA.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/stealth-omicron-variant-no-cause-for-alarm-but-could-slow-case-decline-1076390.html" target="_blank">‘Stealth’ Omicron variant no cause for alarm, but could slow case decline</a></strong></p>.<p>A December post from a US website claimed Covid-19 shots caused something called "vaccine acquired immune deficiency syndrome", citing a study.</p>.<p>But the study in question -- which covered waning effects of vaccines over time -- made no mention of any such "syndrome".</p>.<p>One of its authors confirmed to AFP that the post amounts to "misinformation".</p>.<p>The bogus health claims don't end there.</p>.<p>One video created in 2020 that continued to be shared online into 2021 claimed that "97 percent of corona vaccine recipients will become infertile", citing a "Big Pharma whistleblower".</p>.<p>But infertility is not cited as a side effect in any vaccine so far -- for coronavirus or anything else.</p>.<p>"There's no vaccine in the world that can cause infertility," Katharine White, an obstetrics and gynaecology professor at Boston University School of Medicine, told AFP when asked about the matter last year.</p>.<p>Claims about some vaccines altering DNA have also taken hold online.</p>.<p>They involve mRNA vaccines, which tell the body to produce proteins that resemble those of the virus instead of using a component or modified virus, as seen in the flu vaccine, for example.</p>.<p>The technology has led some to believe untrue claims that the vaccines interfere with people's genes.</p>.<p>But our genes are located in a special part of our cells called the nucleus, and mRNA jab material does not access that part of our bodies.</p>.<p>That means it is impossible for the material to reach our DNA.</p>.<p>Statistics surrounding vaccines are often taken out of context or distorted to show they are ineffective.</p>.<p>In France, for example, some people point to official figures that say there are more Covid cases in vaccinated people than in unvaccinated people.</p>.<p>But since such a large portion of France's population is vaccinated -- more than 75 percent -- it is not surprising that Covid cases are occurring among the vaccinated.</p>.<p>Covid vaccines are known to help prevent severe illness and death -- but they do not necessarily prevent the virus from spreading.</p>.<p>That means that cases still occur among the vaccinated, and there will be more cases among the vaccinated if a greater number of people are vaccinated.</p>.<p>And if, for example, 100 percent of a population is vaccinated, any occurrence of infection or hospitalisations will be among the vaccinated.</p>.<p>It is not a reflection of the vaccines, but rather a well-known phenomenon among statisticians known as "Simpson's paradox".</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>
<p>Disinformation around Covid vaccines has existed as long as the jabs themselves.</p>.<p>Unverified studies, unproven claims and out-of-context data are regularly shared on websites and social media across the globe -- fuelling dangerous myths about the virus and the vaccines.</p>.<p>As Austria becomes the first European Union country to make vaccines mandatory this week, AFP looks at some common disinformation surrounding the jabs:</p>.<p>A common concern about the Covid vaccines is that they can cause harm, or even death, to those who get them.</p>.<p>Some websites claim to link health risks to the jabs. Others offer information that is then used by people as alleged proof that vaccines are dangerous.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/vaccination-vs-punishment-how-jab-mandates-divide-1076434.html" target="_blank">Vaccination vs punishment: How jab mandates divide</a></strong></p>.<p>The US Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is a database that reports alleged harm caused by vaccines.</p>.<p>The website is open to the public, and anyone can submit a report.</p>.<p>But VAERS makes it clear that it cannot be used as proof of vaccine harm.</p>.<p>"A VAERS report does not necessarily mean that a vaccine caused the health problem, only that the symptoms occurred after vaccination," it says in its search engine training video.</p>.<p>If a symptom occurs after vaccination, it does not necessarily mean that the symptom occurred as a result of the vaccination -- a matter of causation versus chronology.</p>.<p>The VAERS site makes it clear that reports "may contain information that is incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental, or unverifiable".</p>.<p>But VAERS data has been used by French politician Martine Wonner to claim 54 American children had died as a result of Covid jabs.</p>.<p>Wonner used the data to argue that French children should not be vaccinated.</p>.<p>Leading medical bodies in the United States and Europe have said that rare side effects can occur as a result of some of the vaccines -- blood clots or myocarditis, for example -- but that the benefits of taking the jabs outweigh the risks.</p>.<p>Other common medical myths have no scientific proof but persist, for example that the vaccines can weaken the immune system, cause infertility or modify our DNA.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/stealth-omicron-variant-no-cause-for-alarm-but-could-slow-case-decline-1076390.html" target="_blank">‘Stealth’ Omicron variant no cause for alarm, but could slow case decline</a></strong></p>.<p>A December post from a US website claimed Covid-19 shots caused something called "vaccine acquired immune deficiency syndrome", citing a study.</p>.<p>But the study in question -- which covered waning effects of vaccines over time -- made no mention of any such "syndrome".</p>.<p>One of its authors confirmed to AFP that the post amounts to "misinformation".</p>.<p>The bogus health claims don't end there.</p>.<p>One video created in 2020 that continued to be shared online into 2021 claimed that "97 percent of corona vaccine recipients will become infertile", citing a "Big Pharma whistleblower".</p>.<p>But infertility is not cited as a side effect in any vaccine so far -- for coronavirus or anything else.</p>.<p>"There's no vaccine in the world that can cause infertility," Katharine White, an obstetrics and gynaecology professor at Boston University School of Medicine, told AFP when asked about the matter last year.</p>.<p>Claims about some vaccines altering DNA have also taken hold online.</p>.<p>They involve mRNA vaccines, which tell the body to produce proteins that resemble those of the virus instead of using a component or modified virus, as seen in the flu vaccine, for example.</p>.<p>The technology has led some to believe untrue claims that the vaccines interfere with people's genes.</p>.<p>But our genes are located in a special part of our cells called the nucleus, and mRNA jab material does not access that part of our bodies.</p>.<p>That means it is impossible for the material to reach our DNA.</p>.<p>Statistics surrounding vaccines are often taken out of context or distorted to show they are ineffective.</p>.<p>In France, for example, some people point to official figures that say there are more Covid cases in vaccinated people than in unvaccinated people.</p>.<p>But since such a large portion of France's population is vaccinated -- more than 75 percent -- it is not surprising that Covid cases are occurring among the vaccinated.</p>.<p>Covid vaccines are known to help prevent severe illness and death -- but they do not necessarily prevent the virus from spreading.</p>.<p>That means that cases still occur among the vaccinated, and there will be more cases among the vaccinated if a greater number of people are vaccinated.</p>.<p>And if, for example, 100 percent of a population is vaccinated, any occurrence of infection or hospitalisations will be among the vaccinated.</p>.<p>It is not a reflection of the vaccines, but rather a well-known phenomenon among statisticians known as "Simpson's paradox".</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>