Typically, vaccine-related stock photography is pretty awful: It’s often inaccurate (think oversized syringes and vaccines being administered incorrectly), fear-mongering (hello, screaming babies!), or some mix of both. So we decided to create our own.https://www.self.com/story/vaccine-stock-photos …
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We worked with
@AmerAcadPeds on these images. They advised on the shot list; an AAP physician consulted on set; and they checked every photo for medical accuracy. Given how much misinformation there is about vaccines, accuracy was crucially important. https://www.self.com/story/vaccine-stock-photos …pic.twitter.com/6DsPm0ZjQ7
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Feel free to use and share these visuals to help spread the word about how beneficial vaccines can be, both for your own health and the health of those in your community. And see
@selfmagazine's entire#VaccinesSaveLives project here:https://www.self.com/package/vaccines …Show this thread
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In your article, you say "All of the images are available to download free of charge on Flickr or from the AAP website with proper attribution," but I can't find any information on proper attribution or whether these are available for commercial use. Do you have any more details?
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Wondering same thing! Do we credit Self? Or the photog?
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