Colorado town hall to address questions about vaccines, herd immunity

The panel for the Community Conversation on COVID-19 vaccines and herd immunity Wednesday, May 12, includes Dr. Emily Bates, Professor of Pediatrics, CU School of Medicine (top left); Dr. Kweku Hazel, Surgical Fellow at CU Anschutz (top right); Dr. Lisa Miller, Professor of Epidemiology, Director of the Preventive Medicine Residency Program, and the Associate Dean for Public Health Practice at the Colorado School of Public Health (bottom left); and Dr. Ross Kedl, Professor of Immunology and Microbiology, CU School of Medicine (bottom right).
Will we reach herd immunity in Colorado? What if we don’t? Can it still be safe as COVID-19 lingers?
The Denver Gazette and 9News are teaming up to try to answer these homestretch questions and more as we get closer to a return to normalcy. We’ve assembled a panel of some of the best health experts in the state to provide you with the best information available during a Wednesday evening town hall.
You can sign up at denvergazette.com/community and submit a question, and we’ll send you a link to join the live Zoom conversation at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Our panel includes:
– Dr. Emily Bates, Professor of Pediatrics, CU School of Medicine. Dr. Bates earned her PhD from Harvard Medical School and has given numerous presentations answering questions about the Covid-19 vaccines through schools, churches, and the Denver Public Library.
– Dr. Ross Kedl, Professor of Immunology and Microbiology, CU School of Medicine. Kedl was one of the participants in trials for the Moderna vaccine.
– Dr. Lisa Miller, Professor of Epidemiology, Director of the Preventive Medicine Residency Program, and the Associate Dean for Public Health Practice at the Colorado School of Public Health. At one time Miller oversaw communicable disease surveillance and control activities for the state of Colorado.
– Dr. Kweku Hazel, Surgical Fellow at CU Anschutz, works with African American and Latino communities on vaccine equity and vaccine distribution.
Channel 9’s director of reporting, Chris Vanderveen, and Gazette editor Vince Bzdek will moderate the panel.
Some of the questions these panelists plan to address are:
– If I am vaccinated, am I safe to do whatever I want?
– What are the biggest obstacles for people getting vaccinated now?
– How concerned should we be about side effects of some of the vaccines?
– How do my personal decisions about vaccination affect my community?
– How does immunity compare if someone has recovered from Covid vs. someone who is vaccinated?
– Many young women who may be trying to get pregnant or start a family are worried about getting vaccinated. Will vaccines impair fertility?
– Are vaccines riskier or harder to get for different ethnic groups?
– Will we have to get more shots in the future even if we did get vaccinated now?