EC Report: Many Poles Believe in Vaccinations | EU-Poland-Germany – News in Polish | DW
The results of a search on Monday (21.11.22) by the translator of the report’s report that confidence in vaccination in the EU has decreased in recent years.
“We’ve gone back four years,” the officers comment. The results of this year’s survey are confusingly similar to those of 2018. In the last years of faith in this and the effectiveness of vaccinations for all countries covered by protection in Poland and extracted later, 80.5 percent. and 82.5 percent (in Europe to 75.6% and 74.4% in 2018).
According to the report’s source, confidence in vaccination has been severely undermined by the growing influence of a group of anti-vaccine reviews of false information about vaccinations.
Poland stands out
This year’s report shows that across the EU, 81.5% respondents agree that vaccines are important, 85.6% – that it is safe, and 82 percent. – that it’s effective. This is the external average, but between the countries visual and visual spores are actually produced for vaccinations and different types of strains.
And yes, vaccinations that will help you get healthy in Spain, Spain and Finland. As much as 92.4 percent. of the Portuguese, considering vaccines important, 93.7 percent. considered safe and 94.3 percent. too effective.
On the other hand, Latvians, Slovaks and Bulgarians trust vaccines less, where a total of about 60 percent. consider important. Interestingly, just as EU Member States consider vaccines important, already 16 of them believe in the safety of vaccination oscillates below 80%.
The authors of the report also point to the worrying trend of establishing trust in vaccination in Central and Eastern European countries, such as Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Austria and in the Netherlands and the Baltic countries. Against this background, Poland is different, where today 79.9 percent of people declare faith in the safety of vaccinations. respondents (up from 71.4% in 2018), 80.5% believe that vaccinations are important and 82.5% that they are effective.
When it comes to the type of vaccine in Poland, the greatest confidence is in the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella, followed by influenza vaccination and further HPV vaccination against human papillomavirus. Germans trust vaccines more than Poles. Here, 85.9 percent. of respondents consider it safe, 83.5 percent. considered important, and 89.6 percent too effective.
EU on the coronavirus
The EU’s damaging response to the coronavirus. Creations of the factor estimate that the COVID-19 vaccination, existence, existence and marketing in just 10 months, has already prevented over 14 million premature deaths, still has not affected the high-trust society.
Impact on the fact that a wave of disinformation regarding the coronavirus flooded during the use of the EU. I take, for example, as the level of trust in vaccinations in Poland is high, only 67.8 percent believe in the safety of COVID-19 vaccines. of those asked, and 70.4% of their importance. In Germany, the figures are higher: the vaccines are harmful according to 82% of respondents. asked, and safe 79.6 percent.
as for general vaccination confidence, COVID-19 vaccines may be the most trusted in Europe, Spain and Denmark, and damage in Slovakia, Latvia and Bulgaria. Interestingly, in the latter country only 45% of respondents consider it safe.
– Pandemic of appearance, how important vaccines are, saving the symptoms of human disease. Show the report how quickly trust can change and how many factors can influence it – propose a program of EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides.
generational difference
Also our generation gap report when it comes to trust in vaccinations. Research shows that over the past four years, confidence in seriousness has declined in the 18-34 age group. General study confirming that people aged 45 and over are willing to help themselves due to the fact that vaccinations are important, safe and effective than young members of the European Union.
As the authors of the reports note, this damage to the trust in vaccines between the elderly and the young is worrying, as it may have future implications on the effectiveness of routine vaccinations for children. The authors of the report also based on the correlation of trust in vaccination presented by doctors and the general public. Where vaccinations can contribute to supporting workers in health, there will be a greater increase in society’s goodness and faith in their effects.
In Poland, 98.7 percent. doctors would recommend the MMR vaccine to patients, 94.3% influenza vaccine, and 89.4 percent. to COVID-19, of which almost 84 percent. this would recommend vaccination for pregnant women.