Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Survey examines hesitancy in early vaccine rollout

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2021 03:29 PM
  • Survey examines hesitancy in early vaccine rollout

A national survey suggests the vast majority of Canadians planned to get vaccinated against COVID-19 when the country's rollout began, but intentions were lower among certain demographics, including residents of Alberta and racialized communities.

The survey, led by researchers at Toronto's St. Michael's Hospital, was published online Tuesday in The Lancet Regional Health —Americas.

The survey asked more than 14,500 Canadians online between December 2020 and February 2021 if they intended to get vaccinated once they were eligible, with researchers identifying differences in participants by age, education, ethnicity, and home province.

Nine per cent of respondents overall said they did not intend to get vaccinated, with hesitancy highest in Alberta at 16 per cent, and Manitoba and Saskatchewan, both at 14 per cent.

Fifteen per cent of respondents who identified as Indigenous and 12 per cent of those identifying as racialized said they did not intend to get vaccinated.

Men were more hesitant than women overall — 11 per cent versus eight — and participants aged 40 to 59 had the lowest vaccination intention, with about 12 per cent reporting no intention to get vaccinated.

The survey suggested that education also factored into hesitancy, with 14 per cent of participants with a college education or less saying they did not intend to get vaccinated, compared to five per cent of respondents with a bachelor's degree or higher.

The study did not indicate whether intent translated into action, but researchers say they plan to answer that in the coming months.

They noted that 18 per cent of eligible Canadians had not yet received a COVID-19 vaccine dose by Aug. 27 — nearly twice the rate expected in the survey.

Researchers said the findings should encourage policymakers to target vaccine campaigns on the most reluctant groups, as well as those who said they planned to get a shot but did not.

The study was a collaboration between the Centre for Global Health Research at Unity Health Toronto, the University of Toronto and the Angus Reid Forum. Funding was provided by an unrestricted grant from Pfizer Global Medical Grants and Unity Health Toronto.

MORE National ARTICLES

Officer injured during traffic stop in Penticton

Officer injured during traffic stop in Penticton
Police say the car then pulled forward, striking the officer and side swiping a marked police vehicle before fleeing.

Officer injured during traffic stop in Penticton

53 COVID-19 infections at Calgary hospital

53 COVID-19 infections at Calgary hospital
Alberta Health Services said Monday that 26 patients and 27 workers at the Foothills Medical Centre have contracted the novel coronavirus. Four patients have died.

53 COVID-19 infections at Calgary hospital

U.S. 'cherry-picked' evidence against Meng: lawyer

U.S. 'cherry-picked' evidence against Meng: lawyer
Canada's attorney general has said in documents that Huawei controlled Skycom's operations in Iran from 2007 until 2014, which contradicts Meng's statements.

U.S. 'cherry-picked' evidence against Meng: lawyer

CPP breaking rules on politics: environment group

CPP breaking rules on politics: environment group
Crestone Peak Resources is 95 per cent owned by the Canada Pension Plan. One of the company's five directors also works for the pension plan.

CPP breaking rules on politics: environment group

Judge orders Pascale Ferrier to remain behind bars

Judge orders Pascale Ferrier to remain behind bars
Timothy Lynch of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Buffalo, N.Y., described Ferrier as being "loaded for bear" when she was stopped Sept. 20 at the Peace Bridge border crossing.

Judge orders Pascale Ferrier to remain behind bars

Pandemic highlights duty to document: info czar

Pandemic highlights duty to document: info czar
Maynard is an ombudsman for users of the Access to Information Act, which allows people who pay $5 to request government records ranging from briefing notes to meeting minutes.

Pandemic highlights duty to document: info czar