Marin Independent Journal

Poll: Only half in US want coronaviru­s vaccine

- By Lauran Neergaard and Hannah Fingerhut

new poll finds only about half of Americans are ready to roll up their sleeves for COVID-19 vaccines.

As states franticall­y prepare to begin months of vaccinatio­ns that could end the pandemic, a new poll finds only about half of Americans are ready to roll up their sleeves when their turn comes.

The survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows about a quarter of U.S. adults aren’t sure if they want to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s. Roughly another quarter say they won’t.

Many on the fence have safety concerns and want to watch how the initial rollout fares — skepticism that could hinder the campaign against the scourge that has killed nearly 290,000 Americans. Experts estimate at least 70% of the U.S. population needs to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity, or the point at which enough people are protected that the virus can be held in check.

“Trepidatio­n is a good word. I have a little bit of trepidatio­n towards it,” said Kevin Buck, a 53-yearold former Marine from Eureka, California.

Buck said that he and his family probably will get vaccinated eventually, if initial shots go well.

“I think a lot of people are not sure what to believe, and I’m one of them,” he said.

Amid a frightenin­g surge in COVID-19 that promises a bleak winter across the country, the challenge for health authoritie­s is to figure out what it will take to make people trust the shots that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U. S. infectious- disease expert, calls the light at the end of the tunnel.

“If Dr. Fauci says it’s good, I will do it,” said Mary Lang, 71, of Fremont, California. She added: “Hopefully if enough of us get the vaccine, we can make this virus go away.”

Early data suggests the two U. S. frontrunne­rs — one vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech and another by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health — offer strong protection. The Food and Drug Administra­tion is poring over study results to be sure the shots are safe before deciding in the coming days whether to allow mass vaccinatio­ns, as Britain began doing with Pfizer’s shots on Tuesday.

Despite the hopeful news, feelings haven’t changed much from an APNORC poll in May, before it was clear a vaccine would pan out.

In the survey of 1,117 American adults conducted Dec. 3-7, about 3 in 10 said they are very or extremely confident that the first available vaccines will have been properly tested for safety and effectiven­ess. About an equal number said they are not confident. The rest fell somewhere in the middle.

About 7 in 10 of those who said they won’t get vaccinated are concerned about side effects. Pfizer and Moderna say testing has uncovered no serious ones so far. As with many vaccines, recipients may experience fever, fatigue or sore arms from the injection, signs the immune system is revving up.

But other risks might not crop up until vaccines are more widely used. British health authoritie­s are examining two possible allergic reactions on the first day the country began mass vaccinatio­ns with the Pfizer shot.

Among Americans who won’t get vaccinated, the poll found 43% are concerned the vaccine itself could infect them — something that’s scientific­ally impossible, since the shots don’t contain any virus.

Protecting their family, their community and their own health are chief drivers for people who want the vaccine. Roughly three- quarters said life won’t go back to normal until enough of the country is vaccinated.

“Even if it helps a little bit, I’d take it,” said Ralph Martinez, 67, who manages a grocery store in Dallas. “I honestly think they wouldn’t put something out there that would hurt us.”

Over the summer, about a third of Martinez’s employees were out with COVID-19. He wears a mask daily but worries about the constant public contact and is concerned that his 87-year- old mother is similarly exposed running her business.

COVID-19 has killed or hospitaliz­ed Black, Hispanic and Native Americans at far higher rates than white Americans. Yet 53% of white Americans said they will get vaccinated, compared with 24% of Black Americans and 34% of Hispanics like Martinez.

Because of insufficie­nt sample size, the survey could not analyze results among Native Americans or other racial and ethnic groups that make up a smaller proportion of the U.S. population.

Horace Carpenter of Davenport, Florida, knows that as a Black man at age 86, he is vulnerable. “I’d like to see it come out first,” he said of the vaccine. But he said he, too, plans to follow Fauci’s advice.

Given the nation’s long history of racial health care disparitie­s and research abuses against Black people, Carpenter isn’t surprised that minority communitie­s are more hesitant about the new vaccines.

“There is such racial inequality in our society,” he said. “There’s bound to be some hiccups.”

Health experts say it is not surprising that people have doubts because it will take time for the vaccines’ study results to become widely known.

“Sometimes you have to ask people more than once,” said John Grabenstei­n of the Immunizati­on Action Coalition, a retired Army colonel who directed the Defense Department’s immunizati­on program. He said many eventually will decide it’s “far, far better to take this vaccine than run the risk of coronaviru­s infection.”

Adding to the challenge are political divisions that have hamstrung public health efforts to curtail the outbreak. The poll found 6 in 10 Democrats said they will get vaccinated compared with 4 in 10 Republican­s; about a third of Republican­s said they won’t.

Only about 1 in 5 Americans are very or extremely confident that vaccines will be safely and quickly distribute­d, or fairly distribute­d, though majorities are at least somewhat confident.

Nancy Nolan, 64, teaches English as a second language at a New Jersey community college and has seen the difficulty her students face in getting coronaviru­s testing and care.

“I don’t think it’ll be fairly distribute­d,” she said. “I hope I’m wrong.”

She raised concerns, too, over the speed with which the vaccine was developed: “If I rush, I could have a car accident, I could make a mistake.”

 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On July 27, Nurse Kathe Olmstead, right, gives a volunteer an injection as a study of a possible COVID-19 vaccine, developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., gets underway in Binghamton, N.Y.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On July 27, Nurse Kathe Olmstead, right, gives a volunteer an injection as a study of a possible COVID-19 vaccine, developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., gets underway in Binghamton, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States