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Report; 69% Of US Plans To Get COVID Vaccine

There is a lot of discussion and controversy about the COVID vaccine, raising questions about all things from the nature of the disease to many others. However, in a report from Yahoo! News citing the CDC, 69% of Americans are reporting they intend to receive the vaccine, up from 52% last year.

More Americans are warming up to COVID-19 vaccines, with 19% saying they’ve already received at least one dose and 49% expressing intent to do so when they get the chance, according to new poll results.

Altogether, 69% of U.S. adults surveyed by the Pew Research Center now intend to become vaccinated. That’s up from 60% in November and 52% in September.

Still, 15% of respondents said they “definitely” wouldn’t get a COVID-19 vaccine and another 15% said they would “probably” pass up the shots.

Karen Kaplan
Fri, March 5, 2021, 4:36 PM·4 min read
PACOIMA, CA – MARCH 04, 2021: Ponciano Sanchez, 57, of Pacoima, gives the thumbs up as he receives a vaccine shot from registered nurse Celeste Montoya at a COVID-19 vaccination pop-up site located at Valley Crossroads Seventh Day Adventist Church in Pacoima. Vaccination pop-up sites are being offered to residents of Los Angeles City Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez’s district in the Northeast San Fernando Valley over the next three weeks. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
Ponciano Sanchez gives a thumbs-up sign as he receives a dose of COVID-19 vaccine at a pop-up site in Pacoima. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
More Americans are warming up to COVID-19 vaccines, with 19% saying they’ve already received at least one dose and 49% expressing intent to do so when they get the chance, according to new poll results.

Altogether, 69% of U.S. adults surveyed by the Pew Research Center now intend to become vaccinated. That’s up from 60% in November and 52% in September.

Still, 15% of respondents said they “definitely” wouldn’t get a COVID-19 vaccine and another 15% said they would “probably” pass up the shots.

Epidemiologists estimate that up to 85% of the country will need to be vaccinated in order to achieve herd immunity against the coronavirus. At that point, the virus will have difficulty finding new hosts to infect, and the outbreak will come to an end.

Nearly 29 million Americans have had coronavirus infections, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. But experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say even those who have recovered from an infection should get vaccinated because the protection is likely to be more long-lasting.

More than half of those surveyed — 58% — said that the emergence of new coronavirus variants has increased the urgency for Americans to get vaccinated. Strains from South Africa and Brazil were less susceptible to vaccines in clinical trials, and others — including one that emerged in California — have shown signs of vaccine resistance in laboratory tests. Health officials have also urged vaccination as a way to get ahead of more transmissible strains, such as the one from the United Kingdom. (source)

Given the rise of “vaccine passports” and questions about its efficacity among new and evolving variants of the virus, and knowing how many people in the US tend to have a ‘self-reinforcing’ mentality when it comes to people who do something that is considered ‘critical’ of a socially accepted view, it will be interesting to see if those who refuse vaccines are eventually treated as social pariahs or possibly, people engaging in criminal activity in a formal sense, or both.

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