Sean Hannity.Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

As cases of the Delta variant of COVID-19 surge around the country — particularly in regions that supported former PresidentDonald Trump— Fox News hostSean Hannityis urging his viewers to get vaccinated.
“Please take COVID seriously, I can’t say it enough. Enough people have died. We don’t need any more deaths,” Hannity, 59, said on Monday night’s episode of his primetime show. “Research like crazy, talk to your doctor, your doctors, medical professionals you trust based on your unique medical history, your current medical condition, and you and your doctor make a very important decision for your own safety. Take it seriously.”
Hannity continued: “You also have a right to medical privacy, doctor-patient confidentiality is also very important. And it absolutely makes sense for many Americans to get vaccinated. I believe in science. I believe in the science of vaccination.”
However, on the same show, Hannity assailed universities for mandating vaccinations — even though school immunization mandates for other diseases are common.
Despite consensus from the medical and scientific communities that the vaccines are safe and necessary to prevent the spread of the virus, U.S. vaccination efforts have been met with a political divide.
Areas of the country that supported former President Trump now show thelowest rates of vaccinationand higher rates of hospitalization and deaths from the virus.
A recent pollfrom the Public Religion Research Institutefound that 16% of Fox watchers said they would refuse a COVID-19 vaccine. The number was an even higher 32% for watchers of the right-wing Newsmax and OAN networks.
Hannity’s fellow primetime Fox News hosts, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, have featured guests who have made misleading claims about the vaccines' efficacy.
In a Monday segment on his own show,Carlson told viewers: “There are a lot of people giving you medical advice on television and you should ignore them.”
Other Fox News personalities, like Steve Doocy and Bill Hemmer also spoke positively about COVID vaccines on the network this week.
In a separate segment on the same show, Hemmer asked the network’s medical contributor Marc Siegel: “The vaccine works, right? We haven’t budged on that, have we, doc?”
“The vaccine works extremely well even against the delta variant, preventing infection in 90 percent of cases,” Siegel said.
Multiple large-scale studies have found that vaccines are safe.There is no scientific link between vaccines and autism, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
source: people.com