Menu Close
  • Clinical
    • In the Literature
    • Key Clinical Questions
    • Interpreting Diagnostic Tests
    • Coding Corner
    • Clinical
    • Clinical Guidelines
    • COVID-19
    • POCUS
  • Practice Management
    • Quality
    • Public Policy
    • How We Did It
    • Key Operational Question
    • Technology
    • Practice Management
  • Diversity
  • Career
    • Leadership
    • Education
    • Movers and Shakers
    • Career
    • Learning Portal
    • The Hospital Leader Blog
  • Pediatrics
  • HM Voices
    • Commentary
    • In Your Eyes
    • In Your Words
  • SHM Resources
    • Society of Hospital Medicine
    • Journal of Hospital Medicine
    • SHM Career Center
    • SHM Converge
    • Join SHM
    • Converge Coverage
    • SIG Spotlight
    • Chapter Spotlight
    • #JHM Chat
  • Industry Content
    • Patient Monitoring with Tech
An Official Publication of
  • Clinical
    • In the Literature
    • Key Clinical Questions
    • Interpreting Diagnostic Tests
    • Coding Corner
    • Clinical
    • Clinical Guidelines
    • COVID-19
    • POCUS
  • Practice Management
    • Quality
    • Public Policy
    • How We Did It
    • Key Operational Question
    • Technology
    • Practice Management
  • Diversity
  • Career
    • Leadership
    • Education
    • Movers and Shakers
    • Career
    • Learning Portal
    • The Hospital Leader Blog
  • Pediatrics
  • HM Voices
    • Commentary
    • In Your Eyes
    • In Your Words
  • SHM Resources
    • Society of Hospital Medicine
    • Journal of Hospital Medicine
    • SHM Career Center
    • SHM Converge
    • Join SHM
    • Converge Coverage
    • SIG Spotlight
    • Chapter Spotlight
    • #JHM Chat
  • Industry Content
    • Patient Monitoring with Tech

Half of Americans would get COVID-19 vaccine, poll shows

About half of Americans say they would get a COVID-19 vaccine if one is available, according to the Associated Press.

The poll, conducted by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, also found that 31% said they weren’t sure if they’d get a vaccine, and 20% said they’d refuse to get one. The poll was conducted May 14-18 and released May 27.

A massive national and international effort is underway to develop a vaccine for the coronavirus. According to the poll, 20% of Americans believe a vaccine will be available before the end of 2020. Another 61% think it will arrive in 2021, and 17% say it will take longer.

“It’s always better to under-promise and over-deliver,” William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told the AP.

Americans over age 60 were more likely to say they’ll get a coronavirus vaccine when it’s available. Those who worry that they or someone in their household could become infected with the virus were also more likely to say they’ll get a vaccine. However, Black Americans were more likely than were Hispanic or white responders to say that they don’t plan to get a vaccine.

Among those who plan to get a vaccine, 93% said they want to protect themselves, and 88% said they want to protect their family. About 72% said “life won’t go back to normal until most people are vaccinated,” and 33% said they have a chronic health condition such as asthma or diabetes and believe it’s important to receive a vaccine.

Among those who don’t plan to get a vaccine, 70% said they’re concerned about side effects. Another 42% are worried about getting the coronavirus from the vaccine. Others say they’re not concerned about getting seriously ill from the coronavirus, they don’t think vaccines work well, the COVID-19 outbreak isn’t serious, or they don’t like needles.

The National Institutes of Health says that safety is the top priority and is creating a plan to test the vaccine in thousands of people for safety and efficacy in coming months, according to the AP.

“I would not want people to think that we’re cutting corners because that would be a big mistake,” NIH director Francis Collins, MD, told AP earlier this month. “I think this is an effort to try to achieve efficiencies but not to sacrifice rigor.”

This article first appeared on WebMD.com.

  • Half of Americans would get COVID-19 vaccine, poll shows

    May 27, 2020

  • 1

    Domestic violence amid COVID-19: Helping your patients from afar

    May 27, 2020

  • Seek safe strategies to diagnose gestational diabetes during pandemic

    May 27, 2020

  • Can you catch COVID-19 through your eyes?

    May 27, 2020

  • Severe disease not uncommon in children hospitalized with COVID-19

    May 27, 2020

  • 1

    COVID-19: Psychiatrists assess geriatric harm from social distancing

    May 27, 2020

  • 1

    More evidence hydroxychloroquine is ineffective, harmful in COVID-19

    May 27, 2020

  • Immunotherapy, steroids had positive outcomes in COVID-19–associated multisystem inflammatory syndrome

    May 26, 2020

  • 1

    Is HIPAA critical?

    May 26, 2020

  • Convalescent plasma: ‘Flavor of the month’ or valid COVID-19 treatment?

    May 26, 2020

1 … 234 235 236 237 238 … 962
  • About The Hospitalist
  • Contact Us
  • The Editors
  • Editorial Board
  • Authors
  • Publishing Opportunities
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
fa-facebookfa-linkedinfa-instagramfa-youtube-playfa-commentfa-envelopefa-rss
  • Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.
    ISSN 1553-085X
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • SHM’s DE&I Statement
  • Cookie Preferences