Here’s a quick summary according to partisan affiliation.
Biden voters slightly more likely and Trump voters slightly less likely to get COVID vaccine.
2/ Biden voters are evenly split and Trump voters are slightly less concerned about getting a blood clot from a COVID vaccine.
3/ Almost everyone who's already been vaccinated would do it again:
4/ Proportion of those not wanting to get vaccinated is still about what we've seen in other surveys (~20%):
5/ Most Americans believe COVID vaccination will save lives, and people should get vaccinated as soon as possible.
6/ There may be some loss of confidence in the J&J vaccine specifically, but still high confidence in the other COVID vaccines.
7/ The following statement was most reassuring to Trump voters that the J&J vaccine is safe:
These events are extremely rare. The chance of being struck by lightning is literally twice that of getting a blood clot from the J&J COVID vaccine.
8/ The following statement was most reassuring to Biden voters that the J&J vaccine is safe:
Safety monitoring is working, and the government is prioritizing the safety of Americans. The safety monitoring system for vaccines identified the issue as soon as it arose...
9/ ...and this was shared with the public transparently, showing a commitment to safety.
10/ Trump voters were most likely to be reassured that the Pfizer and Moderna COVID vaccines are safe by the statement:
95% of the COVID vaccines administered so far have been Pfizer and Moderna, with no reported serious side-effects.
11/ Biden voters were most likely to be reassured that the Pfizer and Moderna COVID vaccines are safe by the statement:
Over 113M people have gotten at least one shot of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, with no reported serious side effects.
12/ Personal doctors remain the most trusted messengers on whether or not to get the COVID vaccine:
13/ “Americans recognize the J&J vaccine pause for what it is--a clear sign that our safety protocols are working the way they’re supposed to,” said @BrianCCastrucci.
“Government officials must continue to be transparent and to use clear, consistent language about the vaccines.”
14/ “The communication efforts, for the most part, are working,” @FrankLuntz said. “But to reach the more hesitant populations, it’s going to take doctors and public health leaders, not politicians.”
15/ "There are still meaningful, measurable differences between Republicans and Democrats when it comes to their acceptance of COVID vaccines,” @FrankLuntz said. “The good news is that the partisan gap is decreasing and overall vaccine confidence is rising.”
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2/ "The lack of diversity in the scientific and health professions—a longstanding manifestation of racism—can no longer be ignored, excused, or attributed to uncontrollable factors."
1/ Interested in learning more about VACCINE CONFIDENCE, what some call VACCINE HESITANCY? Have a listen:
- EPIDEMIC.fm S1E64: concerns about vaccines are as old as vaccines themselves, dating back to the late 1800s and smallpox. justhumanproductions.org/podcasts/epide…
3/ Get a fuller picture of the African American experience with vaccines and public health and why we need to prove ourselves trustworthy to build trust in vaccines.
- EPIDEMIC.fm S1E68: justhumanproductions.org/podcasts/s1e68…
1/ Apologies for not posting this sooner. I've been tied up juggling multiple jobs (Bellevue + media + congressional testimony + other), but I think it's important to get this out there now. I could have last night, but...
2/ The Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention called for a pause on use of the J&J vaccine in this country. Six cases of blood clots have been reported among a million women between the ages of 18 and 48 who have received the vaccine.
3/ To put this in context, women who are not taking birth control pills have a 1 to 5 in 10,000 per year risk of getting a blood clot. This risk increases by more than 4x during and immediately after pregnancy.
1/ I have counseled patients on:
- why they need to keep taking their tuberculosis antibiotics for months
- why they need to get tested for HIV or sexually transmitted infections
- why they should take pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV or antiretroviral therapy
2/ I have worked throughout sub-Saharan Africa and spoken with religious leaders, teachers, community health workers, youth, journalists, activists, and politicians.
e.g. why didn't Guineans & other West Africans think Ebola wasn't real? Because they didn't trust the government.
3/ Analytic methods only take you so far. The math we use in epidemiology and economics, for example, is essentially the same. What's different is an understanding of the context, and that comes with experience on the ground, working with people.
1/ It's really important that the FDA & CDC informed healthcare providers about the VERY RARE risk of blood clots after vaccination with J&J vaccine. theatlantic.com/science/archiv…
We normally treat blood clots with heparin, but heparin can make things worse and even be deadly here.
2/ I'm not too worried about the latest news about the J&J vaccine will mean for the U.S. We'll have plenty of Pfizer and Moderna vaccine to vaccinate all Americans. I'm worried about what this could mean for the rest of the world.
3/ It's essential that the CDC and FDA prove themselves trustworthy. Worries about vaccine safety and efficacy and a lack of trust in the health system and government drive low confidence in vaccines.
2/ Can we predict where the next surge will be? It may be too late for Minnesota, Illinois, too. Should we send more vaxx to the NE, where transmission is also up? If there's a seasonality or geography to this, will the southern states be next (like last summer)?
3/ Unless we can predict and get ahead of a surge, it doesn't make sense to reallocate vaccine supply.