Podcast “important today”: Vaccination opponent gives surprising insights

Podcast “important today”: Vaccination opponent gives surprising insights

Those who come out as vaccine skeptics are often counted among the corona deniers or other oaths. But is it really that simple? Or can there also be other, rational reasons for this? An unvaccinated person gives surprising insights.

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Claudia Hartmann is 54 years old, mother, works in company health care, comes from the middle of society and says: I don’t get vaccinated. In an interview with “important today” host Michel Abdollahi, she justified her consistent refusal: “I have a 26-year-old daughter who is one and a half years old and is very, very seriously ill after a vaccination. That moved me to delve deeper into the subject to keep busy and led to the decision that I would no longer be vaccinated at all. ”

It is very important to Claudia Hartmann that she has nothing to do with lateral thinkers and corona deniers: “I want to move away from the fact that I am somehow heading towards conspiracy theory. That is not my concern at all.” She is of the opinion that her healthy and fit body would cope well with a possible Covid disease. She considers the risk of being harmed by a vaccination to be significantly greater for herself.

To this end, the head of department explains knowledge at stern, Christoph Koch, that studies have shown how great the benefit of a vaccination is and how small the risk.

Michel Abdallahi

© TVNOW / Andreas Friese

Podcast “important today”

Sure, strong opinion, on the 12: “Today important” is not just a news podcast. We set topics and initiate debates – with poise and sometimes uncomfortably. This is what host Michel Abdollahi and his team speak out for stern– and RTL reporters: inside with the most exciting people from politics, society and entertainment. They let all voices have their say, the quiet and the loud. Anyone who hears “important today” starts the day with information and can have a sound say.

State with almost 100 percent vaccination quota

In the Elbphilharmonie, when shopping on Sunday shopping or for free drinks in a bar: Germany is becoming more and more creative when it comes to attracting people to a corona vaccination. Every decimal place is considered a success, because the vaccination campaign has not made any real progress for some time. Completely different than on the Pacific island of Palau. The Red Cross has now reported that the island has a vaccination rate of 99 percent. Although only around 16,000 people older than twelve live on the island, things look much worse in other island states of a similar size. So how does the enormously high vaccination rate come about?

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