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COVID-19 vaccination intent increased among prioritized US adults in late 2020

COVID-19 vaccination intent increased among prioritized US adults in late 2020
Photo by Markus Winkler / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Note: Observational report shows increased COVID-19 vaccination intent in late 2020, but lacks quantitative data.

This observational report examined COVID-19 vaccination intent, perceptions, and reasons for not vaccinating among adults in groups prioritized for early vaccination in the United States. The analysis tracked changes from September to December 2020. The report did not specify the study phase, sample size, or the specific interventions or exposures assessed.

The main finding was an increase in intent to receive a COVID-19 vaccination and a decrease in nonintent over the observation period. No effect sizes, absolute numbers, p-values, or confidence intervals were reported for these trends. Safety and tolerability data, including adverse events and discontinuations, were not reported.

Key limitations include the lack of reported methodological details, sample size, and statistical analysis. The funding sources and potential conflicts of interest were also not reported. The practice relevance of this descriptive report is unclear without quantitative measures of change or context about contributing factors. The findings represent observed trends without established causality.

Study Details

EvidenceLevel 5
PublishedFeb 2021
View Original Abstract ↓
This report describes increases in intent and decreases in nonintent to receive COVID-19 vaccination among adults and across all vaccine priority groups from September to December 2020.
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