Teenager who received vaccinations against his parents will
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Ethan is a pro vaccine activist that has appeared on Cnn, Fox news, Msnbc and TED talks as well as multiple other podcasts and media sources.He also bartends at Jukebox in Hingetown.
This podcast uncovers the importance of getting vaccinated especially during a global pandemic. It breaks down what vaccines are, addresses the myths behind why people don't want to get vaccinated, and the importance of herd immunity. It also includes commentary from a Ted Talk by Ethan Lindenberger on how important it is for companies and people to work together to stop the spread of vaccine misinformation. Sources NBC News clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF4RRwjJm_M Ethan Lindenberg Ted Talk: https://www.ted.com/talks/ethan_lindenberger_why_we_need_to_fight_misinformation_about_vaccines/transcript?language=en#t-239198
Measles was declared an eliminated disease in 2000. However, periodically there have been outbreaks within US school children as more and more parents are not vaccinating their kids, citing autism and brain damage concerns. Ethan Lindenberger will come on the podcast to talk about his own experience getting the Measles vaccine against his mother's wishes.
Marc Iskowitz, MM&M executive editor, speaks with world-renowned vaccine advocate Ethan Lindenberger about how COVID-19 has led to a surge in vaccine misinformation online, social media's efforts to quell its spread, as well as how the trend may impact medical marketers' promotion of an eventual COVID-19 vaccine.
Abdul walks through the state of a COVID-19 vaccine and speaks with pro-vaccine activist Ethan Lindenberger about how online anti-vaxxers are exploiting COVID19 to stoke misinformation as well as Dr. Ashish Jha, Dean of the School of Public Health at Brown University, about the vaccine development process and how to build public trust for COVID19 vaccinations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ethan Lindenberger shares what led him to get vaccinated as a teen-- and become an advocate for scientific truth. This talk was filmed at TEDxMidAtlantic. All TEDx events are organized independently by volunteers in the spirit of TED's mission of ideas worth spreading. To learn more about TEDxSHORTS, the TEDx program, or give feedback on this episode, please visit http://go.ted.com/tedxshorts. Follow TEDx on Twitter:
Vaccine advocate and legislative reformer Ethan Lindenberger joins Hannah and Rachel to uncover the truth around vaccines and the impact of misleading information found on social media. Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/signin?forceLogin=false&returnUri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.paypal.com%2Fdonate&state=%252F%253Ftoken%253DoMZFScDWUfSeZaII_QpceWv1yil3nAdF10BTXOXsfKXxXtlMoE8rh_wU19uDOjudPczXoW%2526fromUL%253Dtrue&intent=donate&ctxId=239945121f36446fb315b0d)
MM&M's Steve Madden and Larry Dobrow sit down with PRWeek's Frank Washkuch to deconstruct the fourth annual ranking of the Top 50 Health Influencers. They're joined by vaccine advocate and MM&M Platinum Award winner Ethan Lindenberger, who recounts his unique path towards becoming a health influencer.
We almost eradicated measles in the U.S., but anti-vaxxers had to go and ruin it for everyone. WTF? Dr. Abdul El-Sayed walks us through the history and science of vaccines and the growing anti-vax movement. We meet the people affected, like Ethan Lindenberger, an 18-year-old who defied his anti-vax mom to get vaccinated.
Ethan Lindenberger never got vaccinated as a kid. So one day, he went on Reddit and asked a simple question: "Where do I go to get vaccinated?" The post went viral, landing Lindenberger in the middle of a heated debate about vaccination and, ultimately, in front of a US Senate committee. Less than a year later, the high school senior reports back on his unexpected time in the spotlight and a new movement he's leading to fight misinformation and advocate for scientific truth.** Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ethan Lindenberger never got vaccinated as a kid. So one day, he went on Reddit and asked a simple question: "Where do I go to get vaccinated?" The post went viral, landing Lindenberger in the middle of a heated debate about vaccination and, ultimately, in front of a US Senate committee. Less than a year later, the high school senior reports back on his unexpected time in the spotlight and a new movement he's leading to fight misinformation and advocate for scientific truth.
A Ethan Lindenberger nunca lo vacunaron de niño, así que un día publicó en Reddit una simple pregunta: "¿Adónde puedo ir a vacunarme?". La publicación se hizo viral y puso a Lindenberger en medio de un debate sobre las vacunas, e incluso lo llevó frente al Senado de EE.UU. A menos de un año de ese episodio, y a punto de graduarse de la secundaria, Ethan nos habla de los inesperados momentos que le tocó vivir estando en el centro de la atención pública y nos comenta de un nuevo movimiento que dirige para luchar en contra de la desinformación y defender la verdad científica. Esta charla es de un evento TEDx, organizado de manera independiente a las conferencias TED. Más información en: http://ted.com/tedx
Enfant, Ethan Lindenberger n'a jamais été vacciné. Mais un jour, il a posé une question toute simple sur Reddit : « Où puis-je me faire vacciner ? » Son message a largement touché le public et il s'est retrouvé au centre d'un débat houleux sur la vaccination. Il a même dû témoigner devant une Commission sénatoriale des États-Unis. Moins d'un an plus tard, Ethan termine le lycée. Il nous relate le temps passé sous les projecteurs et sur le mouvement qu'il anime afin de combattre la désinformation et de promouvoir la vérité scientifique.
Ethan Lindenberger never got vaccinated as a kid. So one day, he went on Reddit and asked a simple question: "Where do I go to get vaccinated?" The post went viral, landing Lindenberger in the middle of a heated debate about vaccination and, ultimately, in front of a US Senate committee. Less than a year later, the high school senior reports back on his unexpected time in the spotlight and a new movement he's leading to fight misinformation and advocate for scientific truth.
Ethan Lindenberger nunca foi vacinado quando criança. Então, um dia, ele foi ao Reddit e fez uma pergunta simples: "Onde eu vou para me vacinar?" O post foi viral, aterrissando Lindenberger no meio de um debate acalorado sobre a vacinação e, em última análise, na frente de um comitê do Senado dos EUA. Menos de um ano depois, o aluno do ensino médio relata seu tempo inesperado sob os holofotes e um novo movimento que está levando a combater a desinformação e defender a verdade científica.
In this latest podcast, we tackle the resurgence of Measles, vaccinations, and common anti-vaccination myths!Note regarding our talk on the polio vaccine: Following its mass production in 1955, certain pharmaceutical companies failed to properly inactivate the Salk vaccine, leading to over 250 reported cases of paralysis. Salk’s inactivated polio vaccine was the first developed, followed by the oral polio vaccine (OPV). OPV remained in use in the US until 1999 where it was replaced with an inactivated, injectable vaccine. However, OPV is still used in other countries around the world. Topics Common vaccination myths WHO's ten threats to global health in 2019 Teen secretly gets vaccinated, speaks to Senate Unvaccinated teen sues school for limiting his activity Facebook to ban anti-vaxx ads in new push against 'vaccine hoaxes' Measles returns to Costa Rica thanks to unvaccinated family Anti-Vaxx mom asks how she can protect her 3 year old from Measles outbreak Study on 657,461 children finds no link between autism and vaccines Keywords: vaccines, measles, immunology, anti-vaxxers, autism, Andrew Wakefield, myths, science, Ethan Lindenberger, kale, global health, chickenpox
Listener Zachary wrote to theshortcoats@gmail.com to ask whether it's useful for students to join medical associations and societies such as the AMA, ACOG, or AAP. Co-hosts Aline Sandouk, Laura Quast, Hillary O'Brien, and newbie Sophie Williams-Perez offer some things they find useful about their memberships, including staying informed about political positions and the latest research in their fields, as well as for understanding what it means to be a physician. Listener Oscar about had a heart attack when he read how much money the Carver College of Medicine thinks a first-semester student should budget for additional expenses (aside from tuition and living expenses). So we asked Financial Aid Counselor Chris Roling to help, and it turns out that this area of the med student budget is real squishy. Plus, Dave has some mouth spreaders to use up, so he makes his co-hosts deliver made-up diagnoses to fictitious patients with them. Because that's educational. A BMJ article got us talking about whether or not doctors should be crying at work. And we revisit everyone's favorite anti-anti-vaccination 18-year-old Ethan Lindenberger--who has famously annoyed his mother by getting his vaccinations just as soon as he legally could--after he testified before the US Senate. Are you a member of a medical society or organization? What do you get out of membership? Call us at 347-SHORTCT anytime, visit our Facebook group, or email theshortcoats@gmail.com. SCP T-shirts are available at theshortcoat.com/store!
Today I interview Ethan Lindenberger, the teenager that testified before Congress. Follow his twitter: https://twitter.com/ethan_Joesph16 Follow me on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/majorjobspodcast/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Today we are tackling all of this week’s Hot Topics. We cover Ethan Lindenberger’s vaccination testimony to Congress, the Manafort sentencing, R Kelly, Jussie Smollett, Congresswoman Omar’s antisemitic tweets, Joe Biden and we revisit the late term abortion controversy. Music By: https://www.bensound.com
Jesse and Brittany discuss kissing cousins in Utah who want to change the cousin marriage laws in their state, a listener voicemail related to a story from our previous episode, Ohio teenager Ethan Lindenberger's testimony before Congress as an unvaccinated child and now vaccinated adult, Paul Manafort's lenient sentence, John Kelly's attempt to obscure his Trump... The post #494 – “Kissing Cousins, Vaccine Champion Ethan Lindenberger, Paul Manafort's Lenient Sentence, Bill Shine Leaves White House, and A$$hole of Today featuring Judge Jack Robison.” appeared first on I Doubt It Podcast.
Vaccine buzz is buzzier lately, with a new, young advocate (Ethan Lindenberger) traveling to Washington, D.C. to testify about why he got vaccinated after his mother had refused to vaccinate him and with anti-vaccine activists trying to "inundate" the ACIP meeting at the CDC. We will tackle those topics and talk to three special guests about ACIP updates. L.J. Tan discusses with us the latest flu data, Lori Boyle talks about why nurses need to represent, and Amy Pisani talks HPV and PCV. Links from the episode: HELP testimony: https://www.help.senate.gov/hearings/vaccines-save-lives-what-is-driving-preventable-disease-outbreaks ACIP public comments: https://youtu.be/gynHFXsuYb4
US teenager Ethan Lindenberger has been speaking out against his mother who refused to vaccinate him as a child. Why has the anti-vax movement captured the imagination of so many people despite being detrimental to public health? Whether it’s spreading bad information on social media or seeing dark conspiracies, Joseph Stubbersfield a Cognitive Anthropologist at Durham University and Bob Blaskiewiccz, Professor of Critical Thinking at Stockton Uni explain how bad ideas can thrive. Plus, Dr. Jen Gunter explains how we can all fall into conspiracy traps set by celebrity doctors and ‘alternative’ science. Producers: Seren Jones, Lucy Hancock, Jaja Muhammad. Mixed by Nicolas Raufast. Editor: John Shields.