See also: provaccine

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From pro- +‎ vaccine.

Adjective edit

pro-vaccine (not comparable)

  1. Supporting vaccines and vaccination.
    Synonyms: pro-vaccination, (informal) pro-vax
    Antonym: anti-vaccine
    • 2016, Eve Dubé, Noni E. MacDonald, “Vaccine Acceptance”, in Barry R. Bloom, Paul-Henri Lambert, editors, The Vaccine Book, 2nd edition, London: Academic Press, →ISBN, page 517:
      The study also showed that the interventions did reinforce the decision of the parents who were already intending to vaccinate, that is, promoted resiliency among provaccine parents.33
    • 2019 December 10, Tess Lanzarotta, “How to beat anti-vaxxers at their own game”, in The Washington Post[1]:
      Pro-vaccine advertisements are more likely than anti-vaccine advertisements to be removed from Facebook, often because they fail to meet the requirements for “political” advertising. This probably occurs because pro-vaccine advertisers believe their messages convey scientific truth, rather than a political position.
    • 2020 May 13, Kevin Roose, “Get Ready for a Vaccine Information War”, in The New York Times[2]:
      The study, which mapped the vaccine conversation on Facebook during the 2019 measles outbreak, found that there were nearly three times as many active anti-vaccination communities as pro-vaccination communities. In addition, they found that while pro-vaccine pages tended to have more followers, anti-vaccine pages were faster-growing.