Feb. 8 Web Event:
Americans’ Attitudes and Experiences with COVID-19 Vaccines: What We’ve
Learned from the Vaccine Monitor
Since before the first
COVID-19 vaccine became available more than a year ago, the KFF COVID-19
Vaccine Monitor Project has tracked the public’s evolving views about and
experiences with the vaccines amid the ongoing pandemic.
Tomorrow, Tuesday,
Feb. 8, at Noon ET/9 AM PT, KFF will hold a web
briefing to share insights gleaned from nearly 40 Vaccine
Monitor reports based on survey interviews with more than 24,000 people
since December 2020. The conversation will touch on topics including:
- Who
remains unvaccinated and how has that changed over time?
- What,
if anything, might motivate vaccine holdouts to get a shot?
- How
have variants like delta and omicron affected people’s views and
behaviors?
- How
motivated are people to get booster shots?
- What
can surveys tell us about equity in the vaccine effort, including
across racial and ethnic groups?
- How
are parents approaching the decision of whether to vaccinate their
children for COVID-19?
- What
is the role of misinformation in vaccine uptake?
- How
do different groups view vaccine mandates in different settings?
- What
role does partisan identification play in people’s experiences with
the vaccine and views about the pandemic?
- How
might the pandemic affect politics and elections?
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