Abstract

In contrast to news headlines, we find that available public opinion data do not show evidence of spillover effects from COVID-19 to routine childhood vaccines in the realms of safety or trust; the public actually became more positive about routine childhood vaccines during COVID-19—perhaps as the public contrasted these familiar vaccines with novel COVID-19 vaccines. However, the public nonetheless became more negative about school requirements for routine childhood vaccines, suggesting spillover effects of a broader anti-mandate sentiment that grew during the pandemic.

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