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Vaccinated Americans Making Less Effort to Social Distance
Politics

Vaccinated Americans Making Less Effort to Social Distance

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Story Highlights

  • 38% of fully vaccinated Americans making effort to isolate
  • Fully vaccinated adults most optimistic about COVID-19 situation
  • Visits to most public places similar regardless of vaccination status
  • Vaccinated American continue to report wearing masks in public settings

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A ºÚÁÏÍø analysis finds U.S. adults who have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 are less likely than those partially or not yet vaccinated to be practicing strict social distancing. These results come as an increasing number of U.S. adults are getting vaccinated and the Centers for Disease Control this week issues new guidance on safe behaviors for vaccine recipients.

Whereas 38% of adults who have been fully vaccinated say they are completely or mostly isolating themselves from people outside their household, majorities of those who have been partially vaccinated (51%) or not yet vaccinated but plan to be (57%) say the same. Americans who indicate they will not get vaccinated are least likely to be completely or mostly isolating themselves, at 28%.

Strict Social Distancing by Vaccination Status
Next, thinking about everything you've done in the past 24 hours, which of the following comes closest to describing your in-person contact with people outside your household? Completely isolated yourself, having no contact with people outside your household; Mostly isolated yourself, having very little contact with people outside your household; Partially isolated yourself, having some contact with people outside your household; Isolated yourself a little, still having a fair amount of contact with people outside your household; Did not make any attempt to isolate yourself from people outside your household
Fully vaccinated Partially vaccinated Plan to get vaccinated Do not plan to get vaccinated
% % % %
Completely isolated 10 16 20 11
Mostly isolated 28 35 37 17
Partially isolated 32 26 23 18
Isolated yourself a little 16 14 12 15
No attempt to isolate 14 9 8 39
NET: Completely/Mostly 38 51 57 28
ºÚÁÏÍø Panel

These results are based on combined January and February data from ºÚÁÏÍø's COVID-19 tracking survey, encompassing interviews with 7,806 U.S. adults who are members of ºÚÁÏÍø's probability-based panel. In the January interviewing, 2% reported being fully vaccinated and 7% partially vaccinated, and in February, the figures were 7% and 9%, respectively.

Polling was completed before the Food and Drug Administration approved emergency use of the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine. Thus, all respondents who had been vaccinated received the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines which require two doses.

Twenty-nine percent in both the January and February interviewing say they do not plan to get vaccinated at all.

ºÚÁÏÍø has recently found little change in the percentage of all U.S. adults who are completely or mostly isolating themselves from others when compared with measures taken during the November and December surge in new infections. At 47%, strict social distancing behavior remains higher than before that surge. Given the relationship between vaccination status and social distancing efforts, the figure should come down as more Americans get the required doses of the vaccine in the coming months.

Vaccine Recipients Less Likely to Avoid Public Places, Small Gatherings

In addition to making less of an effort to isolate themselves from others, vaccine recipients are less likely to report avoiding public places and small gatherings of people. However, those fully vaccinated are no less likely than their peers to avoid travel and large crowds. Importantly, vaccine recipients are just as likely as non-recipients to say they are wearing facemasks in public, consistent with guidance from the Centers for Disease Control.

Americans who are not planning to get vaccinated are far less likely than all others, including those who are fully vaccinated, to report practicing these COVID-19 mitigation practices.

Reports of Taking COVID-19 Mitigation Actions, by Vaccination Status
There are some things people may do because of their concern about the coronavirus. For each one of the following, please indicate if this is something you have done, are considering doing or have not considered in the past 7 days.
Fully vaccinated Partially vaccinated Plan to get vaccinated Do not plan to get vaccinated
% % % %
Avoided going to public places 60 73 69 29
Avoided small gatherings of people 59 69 67 26
Avoided going to events with large crowds 82 83 84 40
Avoided traveling 77 78 77 38
Worn a mask on your face when outside your home 97 98 97 71
Figures are the percentage who report having done the activity in the past seven days
ºÚÁÏÍø Panel

Fully Vaccinated Americans Not Showing a Surge in Most Out-of-Home Activities

A separate question, asking about specific places respondents have visited in the past 24 hours, finds little difference by vaccination status. Those who have and have not been vaccinated are about as likely to say they visited stores, restaurants and other people's houses in the past 24 hours.

One exception concerns workplaces, although the distinction, in this case, is between those who have been fully or partially vaccinated versus those who have not yet been vaccinated. Fifty-eight percent of employed adults who have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine report visiting their workplace in the past 24 hours, compared with 43% of workers who have not yet been vaccinated. To some degree, this difference could reflect that essential workers are more likely to have been prioritized for vaccination in addition to feeling safer going into the workplace because they have been vaccinated.

Workers who do not plan to get vaccinated are more likely than others to have visited their workplace in the past 24 hours, with 68% reporting doing so.

COVID-19 Concern Diminished, but Not Eliminated Among the Vaccinated Population

As would be expected, getting vaccinated is linked with significantly lower worry about getting COVID-19. Still, those who have been fully vaccinated retain some level of concern, with 35% very or somewhat worried about getting the disease. Meanwhile, at least six in 10 who have been partially vaccinated or who have not yet been vaccinated are worried about getting COVID-19.

Those who do not plan to get vaccinated are much less likely to be worried about getting COVID-19, with 19% expressing worry, which could partly explain their unwillingness to get immunized.

Worry About Getting COVID-19, by Vaccination Status
How worried are you that you will get the coronavirus (COVID-19)?
Fully vaccinated Partially vaccinated Plan to get vaccinated Do not plan to get vaccinated
% % % %
Very worried 6 11 16 4
Somewhat worried 29 49 50 15
Not too worried 43 34 28 38
Not worried at all 22 6 6 43
ºÚÁÏÍø Panel

When those who say they do not intend to get a COVID-19 vaccine are asked about reasons why they will not do so, 10% say they already had the coronavirus, which could partly explain their lower worry about getting the disease. The most common reasons they give for not wanting to get vaccinated are safety concerns (22%), a belief they wouldn't get seriously ill from the virus (19%), the rushed timeline for developing the vaccines (16%) and distrust of vaccines, generally (15%).

Overall, 49% of Americans are very or somewhat concerned about getting COVID-19, similar to the 51% who expressed worry in the January survey, but down from 58% when infections began to surge in November.

Vaccine Recipients More Optimistic About COVID-19 Situation

Overall, 44% of Americans say they are satisfied with the vaccination rollout in the U.S., an increase from 34% in January. Americans who have been vaccinated, either fully or partially, are more likely than those who have not yet been vaccinated to report being satisfied with the rollout.

Vaccine recipients are also more likely than non-recipients to believe the COVID-19 situation is getting better rather than worse. Roughly six in 10 vaccine recipients view the situation as improving, compared with less than half of those who haven't gotten vaccinated.

Vaccine Recipients More Optimistic About Vaccine Rollout and COVID-19 Situation
How satisfied are you with how the coronavirus/COVID-19 vaccination process is going in the U.S.?What's your impression of the coronavirus situation in the U.S. today?
Fully vaccinated Partially vaccinated Plan to get vaccinated Do not plan to get vaccinated
% % % %
Satisfied with U.S. vaccination process
Very satisfied/Satisfied 50 46 34 45
Very dissatisfied/Dissatisfied 49 54 67 55
Impression of U.S. COVID-19 situation
Getting a lot/a little better 62 58 47 38
Staying the same 22 18 22 40
Getting a lot/a little worse 15 25 30 22
ºÚÁÏÍø Panel

Americans' vaccination status is unrelated to their perceptions of how long COVID-19 disruptions will continue in the U.S. About half of Americans, regardless of vaccination status, expect disruptions to continue into the second half of 2021 or beyond.

Bottom Line

Public health experts, political leaders and ordinary citizens saw COVID-19 vaccines as key to getting U.S. society back to "normal" as quickly as possible. The rapid timeline for developing vaccines -- with three now being approved for use in the U.S. -- and recent improvements in vaccine supply and administration are helping to put the goal of getting back to normal closer each day.

Americans who have been vaccinated feel freer than those not yet fully vaccinated to relax their social distancing behaviors. But as of now, self-reports of outside-the-home activities -- apart from visiting the workplace -- appear not much different from those who have not been fully vaccinated, perhaps because such activities would still mostly be done with people who have not yet been fully vaccinated. As a greater proportion of the public gets fully vaccinated, reports of visits to restaurants, stores and other people's homes may increase.

Because those who have been vaccinated may still be capable of spreading the disease to others, it is important to note that Americans who have gotten vaccinated still almost universally say they wear facemasks when out in public. To some degree, this could also be related to uncertainty about new variants of the coronavirus and how well the vaccines protect against those.

Last week the Biden administration predicted that there would be enough supply to vaccinate everyone in the U.S. who wanted to do so by the end of May. With a steady 71% of Americans saying they have been vaccinated or wish to do so, the question is whether that proportion would be high enough to establish herd immunity from the disease in the U.S., or if efforts need to be made to encourage the 29% not planning to get the vaccine to do so.

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