Vaccine Monitor: More than Half of Rural Residents Have Gotten a COVID-19 Vaccine or Intend to Do So as Soon as Possible
1 in 5 Rural Residents Say They Definitely Won’t Get Vaccinated, Reflecting the Larger Share of Republicans and White Evangelical Christians Who Live There
Most Rural Residents Say Vaccine Supply and Access is Not a Problem, though Black Residents Report Greater Difficulties
More than half (54%) of rural adults say they have already gotten at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine or will do so as soon as possible, as rural residents report less issues with both supply and access than those living in urban and suburban areas, according to a new KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor report focused on rural America.
A somewhat larger share of rural residents (39%) than those living in urban (31%) or suburban (31%) areas say they have already received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
However, there is a larger share of rural residents (21%) than urban (10%) or suburban (13%) ones saying they will “definitely not” get a COVID-19 vaccine, a gap largely explained by the concentration of Republicans and White Evangelical Christians who live there.
Among rural residents who say they will “definitely not” get vaccinated, nearly three quarters (73%) identify as Republican or Republican-leaning, and 4 in 10 (41%) identify as White Evangelical Christians.
“There’s nothing inherently unique about living in a rural area that makes people balk at getting vaccinated,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman said. “It’s just that rural areas have a larger share of people in the most vaccine-resistant groups: Republicans and White Evangelical Christians.”
The new report examines in depth the vaccine-related views and experiences of a nationally representative sample of rural residents. Earlier Vaccine Monitor reports showed concerns about vaccine uptake among this group, which represents about a fifth of the nation’s population and has often reported difficulty accessing health care.
Among rural residents who have not received a COVID-19 vaccine, few (11%) say they have tried to get an appointment – half the share of those living in urban (21%) and suburban (22%) areas.
The large share of rural residents who say they will “definitely not” get vaccinated, and the relatively small shares who have tried to get an appointment or who hope to get vaccinated “as soon as possible” suggest the potential for vaccination rates in rural America to eventually lag behind those in urban and suburban areas.