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. 2021 Mar 24;39(19):2698–2711. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.03.034

Table 4.

Frequency of Intention to Get COVID-19 Vaccine by COVID-19 Disease and Vaccination Attitudes and Values.

Survey Questions/Responses Total Sample, %a COVID-19 Vaccine Intentions, %b
Pc
Intenders Wait and Learn Unlikelys
All 100 50 40 10



Constructs
High Construct Scored
Confidence in Ability to Avoid COVID-19 Infection 34 56 35 8 <0.01
Support for Communitarianism (vs. Individualism) 39 67 31 3 <0.01
Support for Egalitarianism (vs. Hierarchy) 39 62 31 6 <0.01
Confidence in Vaccines 54 76 23 1 <0.01
Trust in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 42 66 29 5 <0.01
Trust in Local and State Health Departments 47 64 31 4 <0.01



Affirmative Responses to Survey Questions
Responding “Yes”e
Have you been diagnosed with COVID-19? 4 50 46 5 0.17
Do you have any immediate family members (spouse, sibling, parent or child) who were diagnosed with COVID-19? 16 48 41 11 0.39
Do you have any other relatives (not immediate family) who were diagnosed with COVID-19? 33 54 38 8 0.29
Do you have any friends, acquaintances or co-workers who have been diagnosed with COVID-19? 61 51 40 9 0.07
Do you personally know anybody who has been hospitalized or died from COVID-19? 34 52 40 8 0.18
Have you been diagnosed with any of the following health conditions? f 25 60 32 8 <0.01
Have you or anyone you know ever had a serious reaction to a vaccine? 9 29 50 22 <0.01
During the past 12 months, have you had a flu shot? 55 66 31 3 <0.01



Responding “Somewhat Likely”, “Likely” or “Very Likely”
How likely do you think it is that you will be infected with COVID-19 over the next year? 37 54 38 7 0.02
How likely are you to discuss COVID-19 vaccine with your healthcare provider? 76 62 35 3 <0.01



Responding “Somewhat Severe” or “Very Severe”
If you become infected with COVID-19, how severe do you think the infection will be? 35 63 32 5 <0.01



Responding “Important” or “Very Important”
How important do you think a COVID-19 vaccine is to stop the spread of infection in the US? 88 58 37 4 <0.01



Responding “Somewhat Good” or “Very Good”
How good do you think current drugs are in treating COVID-19? 70 54 37 8 <0.01



Responding “Usually” or “Almost Always”
How often do you wear a mask when you are not at home and may come in contact with other people? 90 54 38 8 <0.01



Responding “Agree” or “Strongly Agree”g
I worry about the government requiring personal information (name, address, phone number, insurance card) in order to get a COVID-19 vaccine. 39 41 44 15 <0.01
I am confident in the safety of vaccines. h 68 69 29 2
I do not trust a vaccine unless it has already been safely given to millions of other people. h 56 35 53 12 <0.01
I am concerned about some of the ingredients in vaccines. h 57 36 50 15 <0.01
Vaccine recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are a good fit for me. h 73 66 32 2 <0.01
I am concerned that the government and drug companies experiment on people like me. h 47 33 49 17 <0.01
The benefits of vaccines are much bigger than their risks. h 80 61 33 4 <0.01
The CDC accurately informs the public of both health risks and benefits of medicines. i 73 61 34 5 <0.01
Local and state health departments accurately inform the public of both health risks and benefits of medicines. j 68 62 34 5 <0.01



Importance in decision whether to take a COVID-19 vaccinek
Responding “Somewhat Important” or “Very Important”
Rates of COVID-19 infection in my community. 76 54 39 6 <0.01
How serious COVID-19 is for people like me. 82 56 39 6 <0.01
Effectiveness of drugs to treat COVID-19. 87 53 40 7 <0.01
Effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine. 92 55 39 6 <0.01
Number of doses of COVID-19 vaccine needed. 71 51 42 7 <0.01
COVID-19 vaccines are very safe. 94 55 39 7 <0.01
a

Column percentages (of total sample), weighted according to survey weights to achieve national representativeness.

b

Row percentages (of selected characteristic), weighted according to survey weights to achieve national representativeness.

c

P-value for the Pearson chi-squared proportion test at significance level of (α) 5%; boldface indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05).

d

Summary scores created for each construct by quantifying and adding together the responses to the survey questions assessing each construct; most of these individual survey questions are not described in this table, and those that are were chosen based on specific interest and denoted as such with footnotes; scales assessing constructs dichotomized above (“high”) and below (“low”) the median scale score.

e

Those who responded “Don't know” or “Don't care to answer” coded as missing, dichotomous variable created comparing “Yes” to “No”.

f

Cancer, chronic kidney disease, chronic lung disease, a heart conditions (such as heart failure, coronary artery disease, or cardiomyopathy), a weakened immune system (such as from an organ transplant, HIV, or from medicine you take), diabetes, obesity, sickle cell disease.

g

Likert scale response options (strongly agree, agree, disagree, strongly disagree) dichotomized to agree/disagree, results for agreement show.

h

Included in the construct summary score “Confidence in Vaccines”.

i

Included in the construct summary score “Trust in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)”.

j

Included in the construct summary score “Trust in Local and State Health Departments”.

k

Importance scale response options (very important, important, not very important, not at all important) dichotomized to important/not important, results for importance shown.