Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Vaccine Hesitancy Is Fading But Still High For Some Areas, Groups
As more Americans receive coronavirus vaccines, the percentage who express hesitancy about doing so has decreased. However, a substantial number continue to say they won't or might not get vaccinated, citing concerns about adequate testing and potential side effects, as well as recent news about clots. This reluctance, if it continues, is one reason some worry about the prospects for attaining herd immunity in the U.S. Overall, six in 10 Americans say they will get vaccinated or report having received at least one dose. That leaves four in 10 who say "maybe" (18%) or "no" outright (22%). While still notable in size, this is four points lower than the percentage who expressed hesitancy last month. It also has decreased noticeably since its February level (measured with a slightly different question). (Khanna, 4/25)
Essential workers who are not in health care are less likely to want a vaccine than the rest of the general public, according to new figures from the Kaiser Family Foundation. As vaccines become more available, health officials are increasingly grappling with vaccine hesitancy, particularly among those most at risk. According to the KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor, more than 20% of essential workers who don't work in health care settings say they will definitely not get the vaccine, compared to 7% of non-essential workers. (Reed, 4/26)
In December, Arizona Republican state Rep. Mark Finchem suffered from flu-like symptoms鈥攈eadache, fatigue, body aches and chills. But it wasn鈥檛 the flu; he tested positive for COVID-19. Nearly three months later, his mother, who had recently contracted the coronavirus, died after battling throat cancer for over 40 years.Those circumstances weren鈥檛 enough to persuade Finchem, who is in his early 60s, to get a Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech or Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine. Finchem remains skeptical, he said, because he distrusts the federal government and top public health officials, he鈥檚 heard mixed messages about the vaccines on social media and television news, and he worries about long-term side effects. (Wright, 4/23)
Wisconsin counties with the lowest vaccination rates have something in common: overwhelming support for聽former President Donald Trump. And counties that shifted聽more Republican, or "red,"聽since 2012 are seeing lower vaccination rates than counties that shifted more blue during the聽same time period, a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel analysis found. (Spicuzza, Mollica and Barrett, 4/24)
In a county where the COVID rate hovers near the highest in the state, word that parents at several Harford high schools were planning private proms raised some eyebrows if not outright alarm 鈥 particularly over one woman鈥檚 social media post touting a venue that didn鈥檛 鈥済o by COVID restrictions dictated by the Governor.鈥 Harford鈥檚 health officer, Dr. David Bishai, said he started 鈥渃old-calling鈥 and emailing the parents, telling them he didn鈥檛 think they should host such large gatherings, but offering to help make them safer if they did. He could send a mobile unit to test the kids for COVID-19 before their dance, he said, or get them over to Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen, where a mass vaccination site opened on Thursday. (Marbella and Whitlow, 4/25)
COVID-19 vaccinations in Georgia are free, widely available and convenient for many, with free transportation available to mass vaccination sites in Chatham County. But while older Georgians flocked to vaccine appointments, their younger counterparts are less eager.聽"You'd like for more people to be taking it," said Dr. Lawton Davis, director of the Coastal Georgia Public Health District.聽"We've got plenty of vaccine, we've got plenty of availability. But outside of the elderly population, we've not had tremendous participation." (Landers, 4/24)
The Biden administration sees local doctors as key to the next phase of vaccine distribution, after many family physicians complained they've been left out despite being among the most trusted voices for vaccine-hesitant people. Ada Stewart, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, likened efforts to get local doctors more access to vaccines to a student with a raised hand聽who is saying, 鈥淐all on me. Call on me.鈥澛 (Sullivan, 4/25)