Vaccine naysayers came down from 12.8% to 2% in 6 months

New Delhi, Oct 21 : Vaccine naysayers reduced from 12.8 per cent in May 2021 to just 2 per cent in October 2021, as per the IANS-CVoter Vaccine Tracker.

This may be partly due to the deadly second wave of Covid-19 in Inida in April-May.

Several doubts such as 'not at risk of getting the virus', other treatments, 'vaccine themselves giving the disease' and 'vaccines not being thoroughly tested' have evaporated in the last six months, especially after the second Covid wave.

As many as 82 per cent of the eligible population have already received one dose of the Covid vaccine, while 39 per cent have received both doses, as per the tracker.

While India is intensely pro-vaccine, vaccine hesitancy is several times higher in Europe by 5 times and in the US by 10 times.

In the vaccine drive, the entire population may not be counted as the eligible population is only above 18 years.

India is the most pro-vaccine country in the world as 98 per cent of its eligible persons want to get vaccinated against Covid 19, as per the tracker.

The data comes on a day when India reached the milestone of 100 crore vaccinations, and demonstrates that lack of vaccine hesitancy has played a big role in achieving this number.

CVoter Founder Yashwant Deshmukh said that India is the most pro-vaccine country in the world and at all times, 90 per cent or more wanted to get vaccinated.

The talk of vaccine hesitancy being high in India that may hold up the vaccination drive may have been a false narrative, Deshmukh said.

Only 2 per cent have said they do not want to get vaccinated, as per the tracker.

The vaccine hesitancy was 12-13 per cent a year back, which has come down to only 2 per cent now.

In the tracker, when asked if the country of origin of the vaccine has no impact, 22.4 per cent disagreed and 70.1 per cent agreed with the notion.

The 22.4 per cent represents aversion to Chinese vaccines.

A total of 15.4 per cent in the tracker disagreed with the notion that vaccines are compatible with religious beliefs.

Even though 15.4 per cent said this, almost 13 per cent also said they will take the vaccine, leaving the vaccine hesitancy at only 2 per cent.

--IANS

san/arm.



Source: IANS