Photo of a parent holding a baby and a thermometer, with a vaccine vial and a calendar behind. Text above photo reads: “‘Spacing out vaccines’ doesn’t keep kids safe.” Text below photo reads: “It just leaves them at risk of infection longer and means more trips to the doctor.”
Why "spacing out vaccines" puts kids at risk
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Opens on a teen driver and text: “Would you rather teach your teen to drive in an empty parking lot or on a busy highway?” Next clip shows someone shutting their computer and text: “Would you rather install antivirus software or download malware to ‘learn from it’?” Next clip shows a child with a Band-Aid and text: “Would you rather build immunity the safe way or risk it all?” Final clip reads: “Vaccines are the safest way to get immunity against dangerous diseases” and shows the El Beacon logo.
Vaccines are the safest way to build immunity against dangerous diseases
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Green factsheet with text. Title reads, "Protect your baby from RSV." The factsheet explains what RSV looks like, why it's dangerous for babies, how it spreads, and how to help prevent RSV. The final message reads, "Your baby can't fight RSV alone. Talk to your doctor about how to protect them."
Factsheet: Protect your baby from RSV
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Video uses human silhouettes to represent the number of unprotected individuals who can be infected by one person with a disease. On the left, there are 18 silhouettes for measles. A rotating split-screen on the right shows 9 silhouettes for chickenpox, 3 for the common cold, and 2 for the flu. The last frame shows a family with young children and text on screen: "Two doses of the MMR vaccine helps to protect your family from measles."
Measles is one of the world's most contagious diseases
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Flyer reminds older adults to protect themselves from RSV. It explains that adults 75 or older, immunocompromised people, people with hear and lung disease, and adults living in nursing homes are at higher risk. Explains how RSV spreads, what the symptoms look like in adults including dry cough and low-grade fever. Final message, "RSV can be serious for older adult. Protect yourself and those around you." "Talk to your doctor about RSV protection at your next visit."
Factsheet: Protect older adults from RSV
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Video opens to auto racing clips and text: “Measles: Public health’s most contagious driver.” Video shows a red car racing with text: “R₀: The Contagion Grand Prix.” Other cars are shown behind the red car, with text: “R₀ = How many unprotected people can get sick from a single infected person.” The red car is labeled “Measles,” and the slower cars behind are labeled “COVID-19” and “Ebola.” Text on final frame: “Protect the whole team. Stop measles from taking the lead. Get your MMR vaccine.”
Measles: Public health’s most contagious driver
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Video shows clips of grandparents smiling with their grandchildren. Text throughout the video reads: “New COVID-19 strains need new protection.” Ends with the El Beacon logo on a light pink background.
New COVID-19 strains need new protection
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Top shows mild cold symptoms; bottom shows more severe RSV symptoms. “Here’s the difference between a cold and RSV. Cold: Usually mild and goes away on its own. RSV: Can be serious, esp. in infants, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems. Cold: May cause congestion, runny nose, mild cough. RSV: Typically causes wheezing, rapid breathing, difficulty breathing. Cold: Rarely leads to hospitalization. RSV: Leading cause of hospitalization in babies under 1 year old.”
How to tell the difference between a cold and RSV
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Top half shows a photo of a person looking tired at his desk with a red low battery symbol and text: “Feeling crummy after your flu shot?” Lower half has a green background with a green fully charged battery symbol and text: “That’s not the flu. It’s your immune system learning how to protect you. But that's just temporary, until your immunity is fully ramped up.”
The flu vaccine cannot give you the flu
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Halloween-themed with illustrated viruses. Text reads: “These flu facts may haunt you… Read more (if you dare). Healthy people who get the flu can still end up hospitalized. In the U.S., tens of thousands of people die from the flu every year. The flu is extra dangerous for older adults, young children, and people with conditions like asthma or heart disease. Getting vaccinated is the best way to avoid a scary flu season. The flu vaccine is recommended for everyone 6 months and older.”
Spooky flu facts for Halloween
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