The Columbus Dispatch

It’s getting better, but vaccine hesitancy remains troubling

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Vaccine makers reassured Congress on Tuesday they will boost production and provide an additional 140 million doses in the next five weeks, overcoming the production bottleneck­s that have crimped the fight against the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The next hurdle is vaccine hesitancy. Opinion surveys show the United States is drawing closer to the goal of broad public acceptance, but there is a ways to go. Every effort must be made to administer the vaccines as widely as possible.

A pair of polls by Gallup and the Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research show that from a low point last autumn, more Americans intend to get vaccinated or already have been. The AP-NORC poll showed 67% of those asked responded they are willing or already inoculated, while Gallup found 71% are willing, the highest on record and up from only 50% last September.

The goal of a high level of vaccinatio­n is to reach immunity for enough people that the virus cannot spread. That “herd immunity” might require as much as 80% of the population to get vaccinated.

The bad news is the still-troubling and stubborn cohort who are reluctant to get vaccinated. According to Gallup, among those unwilling, 25% say they have concerns about the rushed timeline, but the percentage giving this response has dropped by 12 points since the question was last asked in the fall.

Twenty-two percent say they want to wait and confirm it is safe, 16% do not trust vaccines in general, and 9% want to see how effective it is. Another 28% give other reasons, such as they think the risks of the virus are overblown, believe they already have antibodies, are concerned about adverse reactions to the vaccine or harbor a general distrust of the government.

The AP-NORC poll found that younger Americans are more hesitant than the elderly; four in 10 of those under 45 say they will probably or definitely not get a vaccine, compared with a quarter of those older.

Among Black Americans, 57% said they would get or have been vaccinated, compared with 68% among white Americans and 65% of Hispanics. Hesitancy also is stronger among people without a college degree.

The vaccine rollout has not been smooth, and this has undoubtedl­y contribute­d to the hesitancy. But the announceme­nt that large supplies are on the way should alleviate these concerns, if the shots materializ­e as promised. Moreover, a third vaccine by Johnson & Johnson appears to be on the cusp of emergency use authorizat­ion by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The government and all others who hope to end the pandemic should devote more effort to overcoming vaccine hesitancy, including launching a nationwide vaccine awareness campaign. The shots appear to be highly effective.

They are a lifesaver to those vulnerable to this disease, which is still spreading and infecting people every day. There is no good reason not to get jabbed.

 ?? MARC MURPHY/LOUISVILLE COURIER JOURNAL ??
MARC MURPHY/LOUISVILLE COURIER JOURNAL

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