USA TODAY International Edition

Survey: Nearly 1 in 3 believe vaccine being withheld

- Joey Garrison

Nearly one- third of Americans believe a vaccine already exists to prevent coronaviru­s infection but is being withheld from the public, while nearly half believe the COVID- 19 virus was created in a lab.

As the coronaviru­s pandemic nears 50,000 deaths in the U. S. – around half don’t believe that figure either – new data suggests many Americans hold misinforma­tion about the virus. It signals their mistrust in institutio­ns as citizens are being asked to rely on government, health and other leaders amid the outbreak.

Twenty- nine percent said it’s either probably or definitely true that a vaccine that prevents coronaviru­s infection exists and is being withheld, according to the Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscap­e Project.

An even greater percentage, 32%, said they believe treatment that cures coronaviru­s infection exists but is being withheld. Around 7 out of 10 Americans said those statements are untrue.

“To see about a third of people give that some level of, ‘ Yeah, that might be true,’ that was pretty shocking to me,” said Robert Griffin, research director for the Democracy Fund Voter Study Group.

“That’s a pretty dark type of thought to be floating around the public. There’s an undercurre­nt of a lack of trust in society, a lack of trust in elites.”

He added: “You could sort of see how that could suggest sort of a rather nefarious bit of actions on the part of a wide variety of actors within society if people are truly holding onto that idea.”

The Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscap­e Project is a large- scale study of the American electorate. Throughout the 2020 election cycle, the researcher­s aim to conduct 500,000 interviews about policies and the presidenti­al candidates.

The latest survey – a sample of more than 6,300 Americans taken April 2- 8 – came as most of the country was approachin­g one month into stay- athome orders and before anti- quarantine rallies started popping up at state capitals. Results have a margin of error of plus or minus 2.2 percentage points. The project intends to track responses on coronaviru­s misinforma­tion over time.

“There’s a variety of battlegrou­nds in a public health crisis like this,” Griffin said, pointing to on- the- ground logistics and unexpected problems that arise. “But another one is just how to convince people of the truth about a variety of things.”

Views on the existence of a vaccine are virtually the same among Democrats and Republican­s.

No vaccines or treatments are approved for COVID- 19. Volunteers in Seattle who got shots in the first trial of a possible coronaviru­s vaccine are now getting the second shot – an indicator the early trial is progressin­g well. But health experts have said a vaccine could be 12 to 18 months away, and even that time frame could be ambitious.

The survey found 44% of Americans believe the coronaviru­s was probably created in a a lab, while 56% said this is likely or definitely untrue. Fifty percent of Republican­s surveyed said they believe coronaviru­s was created in a lab, compared with 37% of Democrats who said they believed that.

The World Health Organizati­on this week said there’s no evidence to support the idea that the coronaviru­s was created in a lab and that it was “probable, likely that the virus is of animal origin.”

Trump, who has condemned WHO and vowed to pull funding, said the U. S. is investigat­ing whether the novel coronaviru­s began spreading after an accident at a Chinese high- security biomedical laboratory in Wuhan.

Forty- eight percent of Americans said the U. S. is “concealing” the number of coronaviru­s deaths – a sentiment that’s more prevalent among Democrats.

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