Rome News-Tribune

Report finds 25% of Missouri adults say they won’t get a coronaviru­s vaccine

- Tribune News Service

ST. LOUIS — One-quarter of adult Missourian­s say they would not get a coronaviru­s vaccine at any point, according to results of a national survey released Friday.

The findings from collaborat­ors at four universiti­es, including Northeaste­rn and Harvard, place Missouri’s level of vaccine resistance above the national average of 21%, and near the middle of the pack, compared to other states. Massachuse­tts had the smallest share of respondent­s opposed to a coronaviru­s vaccine, at 9%, while Oklahoma and North Dakota tied for the greatest portion of residents who said they would not get the vaccinatio­ns, at 33% each.

The study — based on polls of 21,459 U.S. residents from every state, including 424 Missourian­s — helps outline what experts say will be a critical effort to gauge vaccine hesitancy as the nation pushes to vaccinate its residents. The subject has already fueled conversati­on among St. Louis researcher­s and policy adjustment­s by state officials.

Just last week, Gov. Mike Parson noted high interest in urban centers, and said that the state will work to hold more mass vaccinatio­n events in the St. Louis and Kansas City areas. “Some Missourian­s are less interested in receiving a vaccine than others,” he said.

The new nationwide study also found that rural areas had “far higher vaccinatio­n resistance” — 29% of rural respondent­s across the U.S., versus 22% in suburban areas, and 16% in urban places.

—St. Louis Post-dispatch

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