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NEW survey shows less than half of Texans “very likely” to get a COVID-19 vaccine

Likelihood to get vaccine differs greatly depending on race, income, political party, age

Less than half of Texans say they’re very likely to get a COVID-19 vaccine and certain groups are even more hesitant. But there are some Texans who now appear more likely to get vaccinated than just a few months ago. Those are some of the latest findings from Episcopal Health Foundation’s statewide survey completed in December that examined the likelihood of Texans to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

The survey shows that 37% of Texans say they are “very likely” to get a COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available to them. Researchers found another 26% of adults across the state said they are “somewhat likely” to get a vaccine. Overall, the survey shows that three out of five Texans (63%) are at least somewhat likely to get a COVID-19 vaccine. However, researchers also found that one in five Texans (20%) still say they are “very unlikely” to get vaccinated.

The overall results from the December survey are similar to numbers from Episcopal Health Foundation’s COVID-19 in Texas poll in September. However, the percentage of Texans who say they’re very unlikely to get a vaccine dropped from 28% to 20% in the December survey. 

Researchers found that Democrats (52%), Texans over 65 years old (49%), college graduates (48%), and people with higher incomes (46%) were the groups with the highest percentage who said they are very likely to get a vaccine.

Meanwhile, the survey shows that Black residents (31%), Texans with some college education (30%), Republicans (30%), and uninsured residents under age 65 (28%) were groups with the lowest percentage who said they are very likely to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

When it comes to race and ethnicity, the survey found similar percentages of Texans from all races who say they’re at least somewhat likely to get a vaccine when available (66% Hispanic, 62% White, 59% Black). That marks a large difference from the September poll. These new results show that more Blacks now say they’re likely to get a vaccine (49% to 59%), and the percentage of Blacks who say they’re very unlikely to get vaccinated dropped (36% to 21%).

Researchers found Texans’ likelihood to get a COVID-19 also varies depending on a person’s income and education level. The survey shows that 46% of higher-income Texans (incomes more than 400% of the federal poverty level) say they’re very likely to get vaccinated, compared to only 33% of Texans with lower incomes (under 250% of the federal poverty level). Researchers discovered that almost half (48%) of college graduates said they were very likely to get a vaccine, while fewer Texans with some college education (30%) and with high school or less education (35%) say they’re very likely to get vaccinated.

The survey also shows how the political divide during the pandemic in Texas now includes the likelihood to get a vaccine. Researchers found that more than half of Democrats (52%) say they’re very likely to get vaccinated, compared to less than one third (30%) of Republicans. In addition, only 8% of Democrats say they’re very unlikely to get a vaccine, but almost one third of Republicans (30%) said they were very unlikely to get vaccinated.

When it comes to age, researchers found that almost half of Texans age 65 and older (49%) say they’re very likely to get a vaccine, compared to 35% of Texans under age 65. However, the survey found that 70% of Texans under age 30 are at least somewhat likely to get vaccinated, compared to only 55% of Texans ages 30-49 and 62% of those ages 50-64.


METHODOLOGY
Episcopal Health Foundation’s survey was conducted from November 13 through December 9, 2020 in partnership with SSRS and included a representative sample of 1,204 Texas adults (age 18 or older). Interviews were conducted by live professional telephone interviewers in English or Spanish based on the respondent’s language preference.

The survey data are weighted to balance the sample demographics to match estimates for the Texas adult population. The margin of sampling error for this study is +/- 3.5 percentage points for results based on the total sample.