Vaccine Enthusiasm Continues to Rise Among U.S. Adults, Poll Finds



[ad_1]

The enthusiasm surrounding coronavirus vaccines in the United States continued to increase month over month, according to a recent survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“The enthusiasm for getting the COVID-19 vaccine continues to grow among people of all racial and ethnic backgrounds, with the largest increase this month among black adults,” KFF said in its report.

Sixty-one percent of American adults in March said they had already received or would receive a vaccine as soon as possible, compared to 55% who said the same in February.

Among ethnic and racial groups, enthusiasm for the virus has also increased for the vaccine.

More than half of black adults surveyed said they had already received or would receive a vaccine as soon as possible, compared to 41% of black Americans who said the same thing in February.

The number is slowly approaching the number of Hispanic Americans (61%) and White Americans (64%) who have shown their enthusiasm for getting the vaccine.

When the vaccination effort was rolled out in December, public inquiries showed skepticism was high among the general public because of the speed at which coronavirus vaccines were developed. In particular, black community leaders – lawmakers, celebrities and clergy – encouraged their communities to get vaccinated amid widespread skepticism stemming from historic medical racism and abuse.

The number of people who said they “wait and see” to receive the vaccine also fell in March.

Seventeen percent of participants polled said they would wait to see to get vaccinated, compared to 22 percent of those polled in February.

Those who said they “definitely won’t” get a vaccine have remained steady month after month since December – between 13 and 15 percent.

KFF also observed a “ubiquitous” partisan divide over those who said they would receive the vaccine.

Seventy-nine percent of Democrats said they would receive the vaccine, compared to 57 percent of independents and 46 percent of Republicans. About 30 percent of Republicans said they “definitely wouldn’t” be vaccinated, a similar proportion who said the same thing in February.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 148 million doses of the vaccine have been administered in the United States.

The KFF survey was conducted March 15-22 among 1,862 adults aged 18 and older (including interviews with 476 Hispanic adults and 490 non-Hispanic black adults) living in the United States.



[ad_2]

Source link