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In the first week of December, only 15 percent of Hungarians planned that if the coronavirus vaccine were available, they would be vaccinated according to data from the CSO Weekly Monitor.
In the first week of December, only 15 percent of Hungarians planned to get vaccinated if the coronavirus vaccine was available, more than a third of them, and 35.6 percent clearly declined the vaccination, according to the CSO Weekly Monitor. .
The insecurity rate is high (28.3 percent) and a fifth of respondents (21 percent) were reluctant to answer the question.
According to the survey, attitudes toward vaccination are more influenced by the image of vaccine safety. More than half of those surveyed do not take into account the views of anti-vaccine groups and skeptics about vaccination, a quarter more.
Government communication about vaccination and information in the press affects more than two-thirds of those surveyed, and information on social media affects less than 60 percent.
Vaccination plans for youth ages 14 to 74 revealed that those over 64 and those with tertiary education plan primarily to vaccinate themselves. The unemployed, the young and the least educated are the most rejected. The rejection rate in neither group reaches 50 percent.
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