Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Many still hesitate to get vaccine

- By Andrew Selsky, Hannah Fingerhut and Christophe­r Weber

So few people came for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in one county in North Carolina that hospitals there now allow anyone 16 or older to get a shot, regardless of where they live. Get a shot, get a free doughnut, the governor said.

Alabama, which has the nation’s lowest vaccinatio­n rate and a county where only 7% of residents are fully vaccinated, launched a campaign to convince people the shots are safe. Doctors and pastors joined theeffort.

On the national level, the Biden administra­tion this week launched a “We Can Do This” campaign to encourage holdouts to get vaccinated against the virus that has claimed over 550,000 lives in the U.S.

The race is on to vaccinate as many people as possible, but a significan­t number of Americans are so far reluctant to get the shots, even in places where they are plentiful. Twentyfive percent of Americans say they probably or definitely will not get vaccinated, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

They are leery about possible side effects. They tend to be Republican, and they are usually younger and less susceptibl­e to becoming critically ill or dying if they catch COVID-19.

There’s been a slight shift, though, since the first weeks of the nation’s largest-ever vaccinatio­n campaign, which began in mid-December. An AP-NORC poll conducted in late January showed that 67% of adult

Americans were willing to get vaccinated or had already received at least one shot. Now that figure has climbed to 75%.

That, experts say, moves the nation closer to herd immunity, which occurs when enough people have immunity, either from vaccinatio­n or past infection, to stop uncontroll­ed spread of a disease.

Anywhere from 75% to 85% of the total population — including children, who are not currently getting the shots — should be vaccinated to reach herd immunity, said Ali Mokdad, professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington School of Public Health.

A little over three months after the first doses were given, 100 million Americans, or about 30% of the population, have received at least one dose.

Andrea Richmond, a 26-year-old freelance web coder in Atlanta, is among those whose reluctance is easing. A few weeks ago, Richmond was leaning toward not getting the shot. Possible long-term effects worried her. She knew that an H1N1 vaccine used years ago in Europe increased risk of narcolepsy.

Thenhersis­tergotvacc­inated with no ill effects. Richmond’s friends’ opinions also changed.

“They went from, ‘I’m not trusting this’ to ‘I’m all vaxxed up, let’s go out!’”

Her mother, a cancer survivor, whom Richmond lives with, is so keen for her daughter to get vaccinated that she signed her up online for a jab.

“I’ll probably end up taking it,” Richmond said. “I guess it’s my civic duty.”

But some remain steadfastl­y opposed.

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