Domain Registration

Vaccine envy is normal, but here’s when it can become dangerous

  • February 17, 2021
  • Entertainment

angry or resentful,” said therapist Steven Stosny. “And sometimes you’re going to blame it on another person, even though it’s the system that’s really causing the stress.”

A healthcare worker gets the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine outside of Hartford Hospital on Dec. 14, 2020, in Hartford, Conn.

Millions of Americans have had to scramble to find vaccines. Some have spent hours obsessively refreshing websites, others have driven hundreds of miles for appointments. Rules about vaccine distribution vary by state, adding to feelings of frustration. 

Analysis:COVID-19 vaccine distribution tarnished the ‘miracle’

COVID-19 vaccine rollout:It hasn’t worked, but change is coming

“I am so jealous of the people who have successfully scheduled vaccine appointments that I could scream,” Twitter user @RaxKingIsDead wrote. @Ann_Bourke_4 lamented, “I have such vaccine envy right now. Just gotta make it to April.” 

Article source: https://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/644522894/0/usatoday-lifetopstories~Vaccine-envy-is-normal-but-heres-when-it-can-become-dangerous/

Related News

Search

Find best hotel offers