Graphic with maroon and yellow gradient background with yellow rays down the center to the top right with text that reads “Set your child up for a healthy future. Protect them from HPV-related cancers before they’re exposed.”
Social media: Graphic urges parents to set kids up for a healthy future by protecting them against HPV-related cancers before exposure (English, Spanish)
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Illustrated asset with notebook paper like backgrounds and yellow and blue scribbles with text above that reads “Research into mRNA began over 60 years ago, with key breakthroughs in the 2000s that made mRNA vaccines possible.”
Social media: Graphic highlights that research into mRNA began over 60 years ago, with key breakthroughs in the 2000s that made mRNA vaccines possible (English, Spanish)
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Multiple Races/Ethnicities
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English, Spanish
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Illustrated graphic with a medicine bottle draped in a superhero cape with text on top that reads “Why do kids get so many vaccines? Because they need to be protected from serious diseases, like measles, whooping cough, polio, and more.
Social media: Graphic explains that kids need more vaccines to protect them against serious diseases like measles, whooping cough, polio, and more (English, Spanish)
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English, Spanish
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Four graphics with orange backgrounds and dialogue bubbles in the background explain how to answer questions or concerns about COVID-19 vaccines
Social media: Graphics explain how people can respond to questions or concerns about COVID-19 vaccines (English, Spanish)
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English, Spanish
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Graphic with green and blue gradient background with ribbon like line ground across with text that says “Whether you call it whooping cough or pertussis, it’s still a serious disease. Vaccinate your babies and kids to keep them protected”
Social media: Graphic emphasizes that no matter what it’s called, pertussis or whooping cough is a serious disease and encourages parents to vaccinate babies and kids to keep them protected (English, Spanish)
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English, Spanish
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Three-slide graphic with a school notebook design. Slide 1 introduces the three ways vaccines changed the world for the better with historical reference to Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccine in 1796. Slide 2 explains that vaccines helped eradicate smallpox, which killed over 300 million people in the 20th century. Slide 3 states vaccines have saved over 150 million lives in 50 years and helped reduce or eliminate diseases like mumps, tetanus, chickenpox, hepatitis, and HPV.
Social media: Graphic explains three powerful ways vaccines have changed the world (English, Spanish)
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Illustration of a scientist doing experiements in a labratory. Text reads: “By the time your child gets vaccinated, that vaccine has been carefully tested and monitored by scientists for many years.”
Social media: Graphic explains how vaccines are thoroughly tested before reaching children (English, Spanish)
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Race/Ethnicity:
Black/African American, Multiple Races/Ethnicities
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English, Spanish
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Three-slide graphic. Slide 1 shows a pregnant person lounging in the summer with text that reads, "Get vaccinated and kick up your feet knowing you and your baby are protected from preventable diseases." Slide 2 text explains pregnancy increases risk of severe illness from flu and COVID-19 and shows another pregnant person outside in a swimsuit. Slide 3 shows a prenant person and notes that getting Tdap, flu, COVID-19, and RSV vaccines during pregnancy passes antibodies to protect newborns.
Social media: Graphics explain how vaccination during pregnancy protects both parent and baby (English, Spanish)
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Black/African American, Hispanic, Latinx, Latino, Latina
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English, Spanish
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Graphic with collage like picture of a woman in a sunhat and sunglasses and another in front of a fan. Text above reads "Why does COVID-19 often spike in the summer? Swipe right to find out." The second slide reads "Warmer weather means more time indoors with A/C, and that's where COVID-19 spreads more easily."
Social media: Graphic explains why COVID-19 often spikes in the summer (English, Spanish)
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Race/Ethnicity:
Hispanic, Latinx, Latino, Latina
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English, Spanish
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Graphic with textured beige background with text above that reads “When you get vaccinated against measles, you help protect everyone, including infants and people with weak immune systems who can’t get vaccinated themselves. There are stylized illustrations of adults and children in navy, light blue, red, yellow, and green on the bottom half of the graphic
Social media: Graphic emphasizes that getting the measles vaccine protects everyone, including infants and people with weak immune systems who can not get vaccinated (English, Spanish)
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Multiple Races/Ethnicities
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English, Spanish
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