November 1, 2023

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
trusted source
proofread

Vaccine confidence falls as belief in health misinformation grows: Survey

Source: ASAPH surveys of the Annenberg Public Policy Center, April 2021-October 2023. Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
× close
Source: ASAPH surveys of the Annenberg Public Policy Center, April 2021-October 2023. Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania

Americans have less confidence in vaccines to address a variety of illnesses than they did just a year or two ago, and more people accept misinformation about vaccines and COVID-19, according to the latest health survey from the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) of the University of Pennsylvania.

The survey conducted October 5-12, 2023, with a panel of over 1,500 U.S. adults, finds that the number of Americans who think vaccines approved for use in the United States are safe dropped to 71% from 77% in April 2021. The percentage of adults who don't think vaccines approved in the U.S. are safe grew to 16% from 9% over that same two-and-a-half-year period.

Despite concerted efforts by , , scientists, and fact-checkers (including APPC's project FactCheck.org) to counter viral misinformation about vaccination and COVID-19, the survey finds that some false or unproven claims about them are more widely accepted today than two to three years ago.

Although the proportion of the American public that holds these beliefs is, in some cases, still relatively small, the survey finds growth in misinformation acceptance across many questions touching on vaccination.

"There are warning signs in these data that we ignore at our peril," said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center and director of the survey. "Growing numbers now distrust health-protecting, life-saving vaccines."

Highlights

Two-thirds of those surveyed say they have already returned to their pre-pandemic normal lives and three-quarters say they never or rarely wear a mask or face covering indoors when with people who are not from their household. Source: ASAPH surveys of the Annenberg Public Policy Center, September 2021-October 2023. Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
× close
Two-thirds of those surveyed say they have already returned to their pre-pandemic normal lives and three-quarters say they never or rarely wear a mask or face covering indoors when with people who are not from their household. Source: ASAPH surveys of the Annenberg Public Policy Center, September 2021-October 2023. Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania

APPC's Annenberg Science and Public Health Knowledge survey

The come from the 13th wave of a nationally representative panel of 1,559 U.S. adults, first empaneled in April 2021, conducted for the Annenberg Public Policy Center by SSRS, an independent market research company. This wave of the Annenberg Science and Public Health Knowledge (ASAPH) survey was fielded October 5-12, 2023, and has a margin of sampling error (MOE) of ± 3.4 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.

All figures are rounded to the nearest whole number and may not add to 100%. Combined subcategories may not add to totals in the topline and text due to rounding.

The policy center has been tracking the American public's knowledge, beliefs, and behaviors regarding vaccination, COVID-19, flu, RSV, and other consequential health issues through this survey panel over the past two-and-a-half years. In addition to Jamieson, the APPC team on this survey includes research analyst Shawn Patterson Jr., who analyzed the data; Patrick E. Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Health and Risk Communication Institute, who developed the questions; and Ken Winneg, managing director of survey research, who supervised the fielding of the survey.

Growing acceptance of vaccine misinformation

Beliefs in vaccine misinformation are on the rise:

Perceived safety of different vaccines. Asked in August 2022 and October 2023 in the ASAPH survey of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Three of the vacines -- MMR, pneumonia, and Covid-19 -- had a statistically significant decline in overall perceived safety (combined very safe/somewhat safe). Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
× close
Perceived safety of different vaccines. Asked in August 2022 and October 2023 in the ASAPH survey of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Three of the vacines -- MMR, pneumonia, and Covid-19 -- had a statistically significant decline in overall perceived safety (combined very safe/somewhat safe). Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania

In addition, many do not know that the flu vaccine cannot give you the flu: Just half of those surveyed (51%) know that the seasonal distributed in the U.S. cannot give you flu, while nearly 3 in 10 people (29%) think that is false. This finding is statistically unchanged since January. The CDC says the flu vaccine cannot cause flu.

Less confidence in vaccine safety

Safety of specific vaccines

The public has widely varying opinions about the safety of individual vaccines—but several of those we asked about are perceived as less safe today than 14 months earlier in an August 2022 wave of this survey. The MMR, COVID-19, and pneumonia vaccines are all regarded as less safe than in the earlier survey.

Beliefs in the safety of individual vaccines range from 81% for the long-established vaccines for the seasonal flu and MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) to 50% for the vaccine approved in August by the FDA for pregnant people to protect their infants from respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV. The significant declines are marked with an*:

Perceived effectiveness of different vaccines. Asked in August 2022 and October 2023 in the ASAPH survey of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Four vacines—MMR, flu, pneumonia, and HPV—had a statistically significant decline in overall perceived effectiveness (combined very effective/somewhat effective). Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
× close
Perceived effectiveness of different vaccines. Asked in August 2022 and October 2023 in the ASAPH survey of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Four vacines—MMR, flu, pneumonia, and HPV—had a statistically significant decline in overall perceived effectiveness (combined very effective/somewhat effective). Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania

Effectiveness of different vaccines

Public perceptions of the effectiveness of some vaccines have also declined over the past 14 months. The perceived effectiveness of the vaccines for MMR, flu, pneumonia, and HPV all had statistically significant drops since August 2022 and are marked with an *. Large percentages of people are unsure of whether the new RSV vaccines are effective. When asked how effective these vaccines are at preventing symptomatic disease, respondents say,

Lives returning to normal

Return to normal: Growing numbers of Americans say they have returned to their normal, pre-COVID lives. Asked when they expect to be able to return to their normal, pre-COVID life, 67% say they already have, significantly higher than in January (52%). However, this is not true for a small but persistent group who see life as forever changed. One in 5 Americans (20%) say they will never return to their normal, pre-COVID lives, more than in June 2023 (16%).

Mask-wearing: Asked how often you wear a mask or face covering indoors when with people who are not part of your household, 75% say never or rarely (statistically unchanged from June)—with 53% of those saying they never wear one. Another 21% say they sometimes, often, or always wear a mask or face covering, and 4% say they don't go places where they might come in contact with people who are not in their household.

More information: Download the topline and the methods report.

Load comments (1)