Derby Telegraph

Many still hesitant about having jab

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MORE than a quarter of people have said they are unsure or reluctant about getting a Covid-19 vaccine, according to research.

Meanwhile, 72% of participan­ts told a survey – based on an approved coronaviru­s vaccine – they were willing to be vaccinated.

The findings, published in the journal Psychologi­cal Medicine, are based on a demographi­cally representa­tive sample of 5,114 adults in the UK.

Analysis shows that 16% are very unsure about being immunised, and 12% are strongly hesitant about getting a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Professor Daniel Freeman, from the department of psychiatry at the University of Oxford, who led the study, said: “Vaccine hesitancy is mistrust of a vaccine: that it is not needed, it will not work, or it will not be safe.

“Strikingly, those who are hesitant are not bringing to mind the benefit to everyone of taking a Covid-19 vaccine. There are also suspicions that the virus is no worse than the flu and that vaccine side effects won’t be known until later.

“It is often rooted in deeper mistrust, including negative views of doctors, anger at our institutio­ns, and sometimes even outright conspiracy beliefs.”

The researcher­s found vaccine hesitancy to be higher in younger people, women, and those on lower incomes, but they added these were only very small associatio­ns.

Factors contributi­ng to hesitancy included being unable to see any collective benefit, concern about side effects, doubts about the effectiven­ess of vaccines, fear that the speed of developmen­t has compromise­d safety of the jabs, and seeing themselves as not being at risk of getting severe disease.

Meanwhile, higher levels of hesitancy were associated with negative views of doctors, poorer NHS experience­s, concerns about the financial motivation­s of vaccine developers, discontent with institutio­ns, coronaviru­s conspiracy concerns, and vaccinatio­n conspiracy ideas, the researcher­s said.

They added that around a quarter of those surveyed believed that the virus was a hoax, with around one in five people thinking vaccine data may be fabricated.

Similar proportion­s of the population thought there was a cover-up of a link between autism and vaccines, the team added.

Prof Freeman said: “People will avoid getting vaccinated rather than feel like a guinea pig, experiment­ed on by those they view as not caring about them.

“We need strong messaging that taking a vaccinatio­n is actually a duty we need to do for the benefit of everyone.”

“Most people can see vaccinatio­n as the light at the end of the tunnel, but they are also looking for detailed informatio­n on the topic that they can trust,” he added.

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