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| Photo by Mika Baumeister, Unsplash |
The poll found that one in six parents have delayed or skipped some vaccines for their children, with most reporting "concerns about the vaccines themselves," report Lauren Weber, Scott Clement, Emily Guskin, and Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post. "About half of parents overall lack faith in federal health agencies to ensure vaccine safety, mirroring the findings of other surveys."
While the poll revealed that the majority of parents support child vaccinations, it also showed that "skipping or delaying vaccines is more common among parents who homeschool children, are Republicans, are young, or are White and religious," the Post reports.
Some polled parents believe in the effectiveness and necessity of childhood vaccinations -- just not on the schedule set by the federal government, which favors multiple shots in a single visit, rather than a more graduated immunization schedule.
Most interviewed parents did not support claims about vaccines causing autism or chronic disease. The Post reports, "But at least 4 in 10 parents say they don’t know enough to say whether those claims are true or false."
Poll results do seem to indicate some level of distrust in how the government manages vaccines. The Post explains, "Six in 10 Democrats are confident in federal health agencies overseeing vaccine safety, compared with 48% of independents and 41% of Republicans."
"Despite Republican parents being more likely to skip vaccines, 77% still follow vaccine recommendations," the Post reports. "Most of President Donald Trump’s voters believe vaccines save lives."

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