10 facts about Americans and coronavirus vaccines
As the drive to inoculate more people continues, here are 10 facts about Americans and COVID-19 vaccines.
As the drive to inoculate more people continues, here are 10 facts about Americans and COVID-19 vaccines.
73% say they are vaccinated, but at least half express confusion, concern over vaccine information and health impacts.
Those on the political right are more likely to say there should have been fewer public activity restrictions during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Publics disagree about whether restrictions on public activity, such as stay-at-home orders or mandates to wear masks in public, have gone far enough to combat COVID-19.
The pandemic and its effects on society became a pervasive part of the media narrative about Joe Biden’s first 60 days in office.
The share of Americans viewing illegal immigration as a ‘very big’ problem has increased.
In Americans' views of some aspects of the COVID-19 outbreak, there is little, or only modest, partisan difference.
Just 9% of the public says it will be less than six months before most public activities operate about as they did before the outbreak.
A majority of Republicans say the GOP should not be accepting of Republican officials who openly criticize Donald Trump.
More Americans say the Biden administration made a "good faith" effort working with the opposition than say the same of GOP leaders.