The survey, conducted by the polling company YouGov and shared
exclusively with Reuters, found Britons and Danes were the most
willing to take the COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available to
them, while the French and Poles were more likely to be hesitant.
The poll was based on questions put to almost 19,000 people.
It also found that willingness to take the COVID-19 vaccine has been
improving in many countries in recent weeks, just as shots developed
by companies in the United States, Russia, China, Germany and
Britain were starting to be delivered and administered in countries
across Europe, North America and Asia.
In Britain, 73% of people said they would get vaccinated, while in
Denmark the number was 70%.
In the United States, however, just less than half of those surveyed
said they would be willing to have a COVID-19 vaccine, a figure that
has remained broadly stable since July.
More than a third of people surveyed in Poland and almost half in
France - 37% and 48% respectively - said they would say no to a
COVID-19 shot if offered it.
Graphic: YouGov vaccine confidence chart -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/qzjvqmjmwvx/yougov%202.PNG
WAIT AND SEE
Confidence among populations about vaccines will be a key factor in
governments' efforts to curb the rate of infections in the year-long
SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus pandemic, which has infected more than 92
million people worldwide and killed at least 1.98 million.
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A study published by vaccine
confidence researchers in November found that
conspiracy theories and misinformation fuels
mistrust and could push COVID-19 shot uptake
rates below levels needed to protect communities
against the disease. Friday's
YouGov poll found that, while sizeable minorities in many countries
said they would not take the COVID-19 vaccine now, most gave their
reason as preferring to wait and see if the vaccines were safe, and
few were driven by entrenched "anti-vaxxer" views.
In France, for example, the proportion of the population saying
they'd refuse the vaccine because they were "opposed to vaccines in
general" was highest at 9%, but still far lower than the percentage
who would reject a COVID-19 vaccine specifically.
With COVID-19 vaccine production and delivery beginning to ramp up,
the YouGov poll also surveyed attitudes to compulsory COVID-19
vaccination - a policy under discussion by some governments to try
and get as many people as possible immunised.
Such a move was most popular in India at 77%, Indonesia at 71% and
Mexico at 65%. Britons were split, with 40% supportive and 42%
opposed, Americans tended to oppose the idea, at 46% compared with
only 29% who would back mandatory vaccinations.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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