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Survey shows that acceptance of Covid vaccines is increasing for some groups, but has decreased for others

South African health workers will soon receive their first dose of Covid-19 vaccine. Image: Alaister Russell/The Sunday Times

Younger people are less likely to be accepting of these vaccines than older people

On August 18, the Centre for Social Change, University of Johannesburg (UJ) in collaboration with the Developmental, Ethical and Capable State research division of the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) will release two reports at a webinar, which will provide the latest findings about vaccine acceptance and hesitancy from the UJ/HSRC Covid-19 Democracy Survey.

Key findings include:

The webinar will discuss these and other key findings from the reports. In particular, the differences between willingness to vaccinate and issues of access will be drawn out. Furthermore, the webinar will highlight in more detail the concerns of the vaccine hesitant.

The UJ and HSRC will also provide recommendations on what can be done to improve the roll-out and the concerns that public health messaging may want to address.

These latest findings come from round 4 of the UJ/HSRC Covid-19 democracy survey, which collected data between June 25 and July 12 2021.The survey was fully completed by 7,631 participants. Findings have been weighted to match Statistics South Africa data on race, education and age, and can be regarded as broadly representative of the population at large.

Details of the Webinar

Date:               18 August 2021

Time:               10h30 – 12h00

Zoom Link:      https://zoom.us/j/92977924187

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