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TwitterAs of January 18, 2023, Portugal had the highest COVID-19 vaccination rate in Europe having administered 272.78 doses per 100 people in the country, while Malta had administered 258.49 doses per 100. The UK was the first country in Europe to approve the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for widespread use and began inoculations on December 8, 2020, and so far have administered 224.04 doses per 100. At the latest data, Belgium had carried out 253.89 doses of vaccines per 100 population. Russia became the first country in the world to authorize a vaccine - named Sputnik V - for use in the fight against COVID-19 in August 2020. As of August 4, 2022, Russia had administered 127.3 doses per 100 people in the country.
The seven-day rate of cases across Europe shows an ongoing perspective of which countries are worst affected by the virus relative to their population. For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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TwitterAs of December 23, 2022, around 80 percent of the population of the United States had been given at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccination. This statistic shows the percentage of population in select countries and territories worldwide that had received a COVID-19 vaccination as of December 23, 2022.
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The data contains the following information:
Country- this is the country for which the vaccination information is provided; Country ISO Code - ISO code for the country; Date - date for the data entry; for some of the dates we have only the daily vaccinations, for others, only the (cumulative) total; Total number of vaccinations - this is the absolute number of total immunizations in the country; Total number of people vaccinated - a person, depending on the immunization scheme, will receive one or more (typically 2) vaccines; at a certain moment, the number of vaccination might be larger than the number of people; Total number of people fully vaccinated - this is the number of people that received the entire set of immunization according to the immunization scheme (typically 2); at a certain moment in time, there might be a certain number of people that received one vaccine and another number (smaller) of people that received all vaccines in the scheme; Daily vaccinations (raw) - for a certain data entry, the number of vaccination for that date/country; Daily vaccinations - for a certain data entry, the number of vaccination for that date/country; Total vaccinations per hundred - ratio (in percent) between vaccination number and total population up to the date in the country; Total number of people vaccinated per hundred - ratio (in percent) between population immunized and total population up to the date in the country; Total number of people fully vaccinated per hundred - ratio (in percent) between population fully immunized and total population up to the date in the country; Number of vaccinations per day - number of daily vaccination for that day and country; Daily vaccinations per million - ratio (in ppm) between vaccination number and total population for the current date in the country; Vaccines used in the country - total number of vaccines used in the country (up to date); Source name - source of the information (national authority, international organization, local organization etc.); Source website - website of the source of information;
Tasks: Track the progress of COVID-19 vaccination What vaccines are used and in which countries? What country is vaccinated more people? What country is vaccinated a larger percent from its population?
This data is valuble in relation to the health, financial, and engineering sectors.
Health & Medicine
Health,Medicine,covid-19,dataset,progress
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Data is collected daily from Our World in Data GitHub repository for covid-19, merged and uploaded.
The data contains the following information:
* **Country **- this is the country for which the vaccination information is provided;
* Country ISO Code - ISO code for the country;
* **Date **- date for the data entry; for some of the dates we have only the daily vaccinations, for others, only the (cumulative) total;
* Total number of vaccinations - this is the absolute number of total immunizations in the country;
* Total number of people vaccinated - a person, depending on the immunization scheme, will receive one or more (typically 2) vaccines; at a certain moment, the number of vaccination might be larger than the number of people;
* Total number of people fully vaccinated - this is the number of people that received the entire set of immunization according to the immunization scheme (typically 2); at a certain moment in time, there might be a certain number of people that received one vaccine and another number (smaller) of people that received all vaccines in the scheme;
* Daily vaccinations (raw) - for a certain data entry, the number of vaccination for that date/country;
* Daily vaccinations - for a certain data entry, the number of vaccination for that date/country;
* Total vaccinations per hundred - ratio (in percent) between vaccination number and total population up to the date in the country;
* Total number of people vaccinated per hundred - ratio (in percent) between population immunized and total population up to the date in the country;
* Total number of people fully vaccinated per hundred - ratio (in percent) between population fully immunized and total population up to the date in the country;
* Number of vaccinations per day - number of daily vaccination for that day and country;
* Daily vaccinations per million - ratio (in ppm) between vaccination number and total population for the current date in the country;
* Vaccines used in the country - total number of vaccines used in the country (up to date);
* Source name - source of the information (national authority, international organization, local organization etc.);
* Source website - website of the source of information;
I would like to specify that I am only making available Our World in Data collected data about vaccinations to Kagglers. My contribution is very small, just daily collection, merge and upload of the updated version, as maintained by Our World in Data in their GitHub repository.
Track COVID-19 vaccination in the World, answer instantly to your questions:
- Which country is using what vaccine?
- In which country the vaccination programme is more advanced?
- Where are vaccinated more people per day? But in terms of percent from entire population ?
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TwitterAs of March 20, 2023, around 391 doses of COVID-19 vaccines per 100 people in Cuba had been administered, one of the highest COVID-19 vaccine dose rates of any country worldwide. This statistic shows the rate of COVID-19 vaccine doses administered worldwide as of March 20, 2023, by country or territory.
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The data is collected from OWID (Our World in Data) GitHub repository, which is updated on daily bases.
This dataset contains only one file vaccinations.csv, which contains the records of vaccination doses received by people from all the countries.
* location: name of the country (or region within a country).
* iso_code: ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 – three-letter country codes.
* date: date of the observation.
* total_vaccinations: total number of doses administered. This is counted as a single dose, and may not equal the total number of people vaccinated, depending on the specific dose regime (e.g. people receive multiple doses). If a person receives one dose of the vaccine, this metric goes up by 1. If they receive a second dose, it goes up by 1 again.
* total_vaccinations_per_hundred: total_vaccinations per 100 people in the total population of the country.
* daily_vaccinations_raw: daily change in the total number of doses administered. It is only calculated for consecutive days. This is a raw measure provided for data checks and transparency, but we strongly recommend that any analysis on daily vaccination rates be conducted using daily_vaccinations instead.
* daily_vaccinations: new doses administered per day (7-day smoothed). For countries that don't report data on a daily basis, we assume that doses changed equally on a daily basis over any periods in which no data was reported. This produces a complete series of daily figures, which is then averaged over a rolling 7-day window. An example of how we perform this calculation can be found here.
* daily_vaccinations_per_million: daily_vaccinations per 1,000,000 people in the total population of the country.
* people_vaccinated: total number of people who received at least one vaccine dose. If a person receives the first dose of a 2-dose vaccine, this metric goes up by 1. If they receive the second dose, the metric stays the same.
* people_vaccinated_per_hundred: people_vaccinated per 100 people in the total population of the country.
* people_fully_vaccinated: total number of people who received all doses prescribed by the vaccination protocol. If a person receives the first dose of a 2-dose vaccine, this metric stays the same. If they receive the second dose, the metric goes up by 1.
* people_fully_vaccinated_per_hundred: people_fully_vaccinated per 100 people in the total population of the country.
Note: for people_vaccinated and people_fully_vaccinated we are dependent on the necessary data being made available, so we may not be able to make these metrics available for some countries.
This data collected by Our World in Data which gets updated daily on their Github.
Possible uses for this dataset could include: - Sentiment analysis in a variety of forms - Statistical analysis over time.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This dataset reports the daily reported number of the 7-day moving average rates of Deaths involving COVID-19 by vaccination status and by age group. Learn how the Government of Ontario is helping to keep Ontarians safe during the 2019 Novel Coronavirus outbreak. Effective November 14, 2024 this page will no longer be updated. Information about COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses is available on Public Health Ontario’s interactive respiratory virus tool: https://www.publichealthontario.ca/en/Data-and-Analysis/Infectious-Disease/Respiratory-Virus-Tool Data includes: * Date on which the death occurred * Age group * 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those not fully vaccinated * 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those fully vaccinated * 7-day moving average of the last seven days of the death rate per 100,000 for those vaccinated with at least one booster ##Additional notes As of June 16, all COVID-19 datasets will be updated weekly on Thursdays by 2pm. As of January 12, 2024, data from the date of January 1, 2024 onwards reflect updated population estimates. This update specifically impacts data for the 'not fully vaccinated' category. On November 30, 2023 the count of COVID-19 deaths was updated to include missing historical deaths from January 15, 2020 to March 31, 2023. CCM is a dynamic disease reporting system which allows ongoing update to data previously entered. As a result, data extracted from CCM represents a snapshot at the time of extraction and may differ from previous or subsequent results. Public Health Units continually clean up COVID-19 data, correcting for missing or overcounted cases and deaths. These corrections can result in data spikes and current totals being different from previously reported cases and deaths. Observed trends over time should be interpreted with caution for the most recent period due to reporting and/or data entry lags. The data does not include vaccination data for people who did not provide consent for vaccination records to be entered into the provincial COVaxON system. This includes individual records as well as records from some Indigenous communities where those communities have not consented to including vaccination information in COVaxON. “Not fully vaccinated” category includes people with no vaccine and one dose of double-dose vaccine. “People with one dose of double-dose vaccine” category has a small and constantly changing number. The combination will stabilize the results. Spikes, negative numbers and other data anomalies: Due to ongoing data entry and data quality assurance activities in Case and Contact Management system (CCM) file, Public Health Units continually clean up COVID-19, correcting for missing or overcounted cases and deaths. These corrections can result in data spikes, negative numbers and current totals being different from previously reported case and death counts. Public Health Units report cause of death in the CCM based on information available to them at the time of reporting and in accordance with definitions provided by Public Health Ontario. The medical certificate of death is the official record and the cause of death could be different. Deaths are defined per the outcome field in CCM marked as “Fatal”. Deaths in COVID-19 cases identified as unrelated to COVID-19 are not included in the Deaths involving COVID-19 reported. Rates for the most recent days are subject to reporting lags All data reflects totals from 8 p.m. the previous day. This dataset is subject to change.
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TwitterAs of March 15, 2023, Seychelles was the African country with the highest coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination rate, with around 205 doses administered per 100 individuals. Mauritius and Rwanda followed with 201 and 190 doses per 100 people, respectively. Ranking fourth, Morocco had a vaccination rate of approximately 148 doses per 100 people, registering the third-highest number of inoculations after Egypt and Nigeria. In South Africa, the most affected country on the continent, the vaccination rate instead reached around 64 per 100 population.
How did Africa obtain the vaccines?
Vaccines in Africa were obtained in different ways. African nations both purchased new doses and received them from other countries. At the beginning of the vaccination campaigns, donations came from all over the world, such as China, the United Arab Emirates, India, and Russia. The United Nations-led COVAX initiative provided Oxford/AstraZeneca and Pfizer/BioNTech doses to several African countries. Within this program, the continent received nearly 270 million doses as of January 2022. Moreover, the vaccination campaign has also been an occasion for intra-African solidarity. Senegal has, for instance, donated vaccines to the Gambia, while in January 2021, Algeria announced that it would have shared its supply with Tunisia.
COVID-19 impact on the African economy
The spread of COVID-19 negatively affected socio-economic growth in Africa, with the continent’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contracting significantly in 2020. Specifically, Southern Africa experienced the sharpest decline, at minus six percent, followed by North Africa at minus 1.7 percent. Most of Africa’s key economic sectors were hit by the pandemic. The drop in global oil prices led to a crisis in the oil and gas sector. Nigeria, the continent’s leading oil-exporting country, witnessed a considerable decrease in crude oil trade in 2020. Moreover, the shrinking number of international tourist arrivals determined a loss of over 12 million jobs in Africa’s travel and tourism sector. Society has also been substantially affected by COVID-19 on the poorest continent in the world, and the number of people living in extreme poverty was estimated to increase by around 30 million in 2020.
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All data are produced by Our World in Data are completely open access under the Creative Commons BY license. You have the permission to use, distribute, and reproduce these in any medium, provided the source and authors are credited. In the case of our vaccination dataset, please give the following citation:
Mathieu, E., Ritchie, H., Ortiz-Ospina, E. et al. A global database of COVID-19 vaccinations. Nat Hum Behav (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01122-8
location : name of the state or federal entity. date: date of the observation. total vaccinations: total number of doses administered. This is counted as a single dose, and may not equal the total number of people vaccinated, depending on the specific dose regime (e.g. people receive multiple doses). If a person receives one dose of the vaccine, this metric goes up by 1. If they receive a second dose, it goes up by 1 again. total vaccinations per hundred: total vaccinations per 100 people in the total population of the state. daily vaccinations raw: daily change in the total number of doses administered. It is only calculated for consecutive days. This is a raw measure provided for data checks and transparency, but we strongly recommend that any analysis on daily vaccination rates be conducted using daily vaccinations instead. daily vaccinations: new doses administered per day (7-day smoothed). For countries that don't report data on a daily basis, we assume that doses changed equally on a daily basis over any periods in which no data was reported. This produces a complete series of daily figures, which is then averaged over a rolling 7-day window. An example of how we perform this calculation can be found here. daily vaccinations per million: daily vaccinations per 1,000,000 people in the total population of the state. people vaccinated: total number of people who received at least one vaccine dose. If a person receives the first dose of a 2-dose vaccine, this metric goes up by 1. If they receive the second dose, the metric stays the same. people vaccinated per hundred: people vaccinated per 100 people in the total population of the state. people fully vaccinated: total number of people who received all doses prescribed by the initial vaccination protocol. If a person receives the first dose of a 2-dose vaccine, this metric stays the same. If they receive the second dose, the metric goes up by 1. people fully vaccinated per hundred: people fully vaccinated per 100 people in the total population of the state. total distributed: cumulative counts of COVID-19 vaccine doses recorded as shipped in CDC's Vaccine Tracking System. total distributed per hundred: cumulative counts of COVID-19 vaccine doses recorded as shipped in CDC's Vaccine Tracking System per 100 people in the total population of the state. share doses used: share of vaccination doses administered among those recorded as shipped in CDC's Vaccine Tracking System. total boosters: total number of COVID-19 vaccination booster doses administered (doses administered beyond the number prescribed by the initial vaccination protocol) total boosters per hundred: total boosters per 100 people in the total population.
20th Dec 2020 to 28th Dec 2022
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TwitterBy August 2024, Cuba had administered the largest number of vaccines against COVID-19 per 100 inhabitants in the Latin American region, followed by Chile and Peru. According to recent estimates, the Caribbean country applied around 410 doses per 100 population, accounting for one of the largest vaccination rates observed not only in the Latin American region, but worldwide. In comparison, Haiti registered the lowest vaccination rate within the region, with only 5.87 doses administered per 100 inhabitants. Booster shots started To reinforce the immune protection against the fast spread of the SARS-CoV-2, governments began to introduce booster shots in their immunization programs aiming at strengthening people’s immune response against new contagious COVID-19 variants. In Latin America, Cuba was leading on booster shots relative to its population among a selection of countries, with around 88 percent of the population receiving the extra dose. In comparison, these numbers are higher than those for the European Union and the United States. Pharmaceutical research continues As Omicron becomes more prominent worldwide, and recombinant variants emerge, research efforts to prevent and control the disease continue to progress. As of June 2022, there were around 2,700 clinical trials to treat COVID-19 and 1,752 COVID-19 vaccines trials in clinical development. Other studies were focused on mild, moderate and severe COVID-19, complication support, and post-COVID symptoms, among others.For further information about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.
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Trends in People vaccinated against Covid. The latest data for over 100 countries around the world.
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The average for 2022 based on 187 countries was 84 percent. The highest value was in Antigua and Barbuda: 99 percent and the lowest value was in North Korea: 0 percent. The indicator is available from 1980 to 2022. Below is a chart for all countries where data are available.
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Age-standardised mortality rates for deaths involving coronavirus (COVID-19), non-COVID-19 deaths and all deaths by vaccination status, broken down by age group.
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TwitterBy Valtteri Kurkela [source]
The dataset is constantly updated and synced hourly to ensure up-to-date information. With over several columns available for analysis and exploration purposes, users can extract valuable insights from this extensive dataset.
Some of the key metrics covered in the dataset include:
Vaccinations: The dataset covers total vaccinations administered worldwide as well as breakdowns of people vaccinated per hundred people and fully vaccinated individuals per hundred people.
Testing & Positivity: Information on total tests conducted along with new tests conducted per thousand people is provided. Additionally, details on positive rate (percentage of positive Covid-19 tests out of all conducted) are included.
Hospital & ICU: Data on ICU patients and hospital patients are available along with corresponding figures normalized per million people. Weekly admissions to intensive care units and hospitals are also provided.
Confirmed Cases: The number of confirmed Covid-19 cases globally is captured in both absolute numbers as well as normalized values representing cases per million people.
5.Confirmed Deaths: Total confirmed deaths due to Covid-19 worldwide are provided with figures adjusted for population size (total deaths per million).
6.Reproduction Rate: The estimated reproduction rate (R) indicates the contagiousness of the virus within a particular country or region.
7.Policy Responses: Besides healthcare-related metrics, this comprehensive dataset includes policy responses implemented by countries or regions such as lockdown measures or travel restrictions.
8.Other Variables of InterestThe data encompasses various socioeconomic factors that may influence Covid-19 outcomes including population density,membership in a continent,gross domestic product(GDP)per capita;
For demographic factors: -Age Structure : percentage populations aged 65 and older,aged (70)older,median age -Gender-specific factors: Percentage of female smokers -Lifestyle-related factors: Diabetes prevalence rate and extreme poverty rate
- Excess Mortality: The dataset further provides insights into excess mortality rates, indicating the percentage increase in deaths above the expected number based on historical data.
The dataset consists of numerous columns providing specific information for analysis, such as ISO code for countries/regions, location names,and units of measurement for different parameters.
Overall,this dataset serves as a valuable resource for researchers, analysts, and policymakers seeking to explore various aspects related to Covid-19
Introduction:
Understanding the Basic Structure:
- The dataset consists of various columns containing different data related to vaccinations, testing, hospitalization, cases, deaths, policy responses, and other key variables.
- Each row represents data for a specific country or region at a certain point in time.
Selecting Desired Columns:
- Identify the specific columns that are relevant to your analysis or research needs.
- Some important columns include population, total cases, total deaths, new cases per million people, and vaccination-related metrics.
Filtering Data:
- Use filters based on specific conditions such as date ranges or continents to focus on relevant subsets of data.
- This can help you analyze trends over time or compare data between different regions.
Analyzing Vaccination Metrics:
- Explore variables like total_vaccinations, people_vaccinated, and people_fully_vaccinated to assess vaccination coverage in different countries.
- Calculate metrics such as people_vaccinated_per_hundred or total_boosters_per_hundred for standardized comparisons across populations.
Investigating Testing Information:
- Examine columns such as total_tests, new_tests, and tests_per_case to understand testing efforts in various countries.
- Calculate rates like tests_per_case to assess testing efficiency or identify changes in testing strategies over time.
Exploring Hospitalization and ICU Data:
- Analyze variables like hosp_patients, icu_patients, and hospital_beds_per_thousand to understand healthcare systems' strain.
- Calculate rates like icu_patients_per_million or hosp_patients_per_million for cross-country comparisons.
Assessing Covid-19 Cases and Deaths:
- Analyze variables like total_cases, new_ca...
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This Flash Eurobarometer survey conducted at the end of May 2021 shows that 75% agree that COVID-19 vaccines are the only way to end the pandemic. 69% are either already vaccinated, or eager to be vaccinated as soon as possible. 79% intend to get vaccinated sometime this year. However, there are significant variations among Member States and by age group, people under 45 being more hesitant than people above that age. On average, 70% think that the EU is playing a key role in ensuring access to COVID-19 vaccines in their country. A narrow majority of those who express a view are satisfied with the way the EU has handled the vaccination strategy (47% satisfied, 45% dissatisfied). Opinions on the way national governments have handled it are slightly more negative (46% satisfied, 49% dissatisfied).
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TwitterIntroductionIt is clear that medical science has advanced much in the past few decades with the development of vaccines and this is even true for the novel coronavirus outbreak. By late 2020, COVID-19 vaccines were starting to be approved by national and global regulators, and across 2021, there was a global rollout of several vaccines. Despite rolling out vaccination programs successfully, there has been a cause of concern regarding uptake of vaccine due to vaccine hesitancy. In tackling the vaccine hesitancy and improving the overall vaccination rates, digital health literacy (DHL) could play a major role. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess the digital health literacy and its relevance to the COVID-19 vaccination.MethodsAn internet-based cross-sectional survey was conducted from April to August 2021 using convenience sampling among people from different countries. Participants were asked about their level of intention to the COVID-19 vaccine. Participants completed the Digital Health Literacy Instrument (DHLI), which was adapted in the context of the COVID Health Literacy Network. Cross-tabulation and logistic regression were used for analysis purpose.ResultsOverall, the mean DHL score was 35.1 (SD = 6.9, Range = 12–48). The mean DHL score for those who answered “Yes” for “support for national vaccination schedule” was 36.1 (SD 6.7) compared to 32.5 (SD 6.8) for those who either answered “No” or “Don't know”. Factors including country, place of residence, education, employment, and income were associated with the intention for vaccination. Odds of vaccine intention were higher in urban respondents (OR-1.46; C.I.-1.30–1.64) than in rural respondents. Further, higher competency in assessing the relevance of online information resulted in significantly higher intention for vaccine uptake.ConclusionPriority should be given to improving DHL and vaccination awareness programs targeting rural areas, lower education level, lower income, and unemployed groups.
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This is the data repository for the 2019 Novel Coronavirus cases as well as vaccination of covid 19 worldwide combined. This data includes columns such as:
country - Data representing that country,
date - Data representing that date,
total_cases - Total cases of that country till that date,
total_deaths - Total deaths of that country till that date,
daily_cases - Total cases of that country till that date,
daily_deaths - Total deaths of that country till that date,
fully_vaccinated - Fillu vaccinated people of that country till that date,
total_vaccinations - Total vaccination of that country till that date,
total_boosters - Total boosters shot of that country till that date,
daily_vaccinations - Daily vaccinations shots of that country till that date,
daily_people_vaccinated - Daily people vaccinated of that country till that date,
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China COVID-19: Vaccinated People: To-Date data was reported at 1,310.489 Person mn in 27 Apr 2023. This records an increase from the previous number of 1,310.480 Person mn for 20 Apr 2023. China COVID-19: Vaccinated People: To-Date data is updated daily, averaging 1,293.447 Person mn from Jun 2021 (Median) to 27 Apr 2023, with 59 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 1,310.489 Person mn in 27 Apr 2023 and a record low of 622.000 Person mn in 10 Jun 2021. China COVID-19: Vaccinated People: To-Date data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Health Commission. The data is categorized under China Premium Database’s Socio-Demographic – Table CN.GZ: COVID-19: Vaccination.
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TwitterEinstellungen zur Impfung gegen Covid-19. Themen: präferierter Impfzeitpunkt; Wichtigkeit der folgenden Gründe im Hinblick auf die Entscheidung, sich impfen zu lassen: Impfstoff wird bei der Beendigung der Pandemie helfen, Impfstoff wird den/die Befragte/n vor Covid-19 schützen, Impfstoff wird Verwandte und andere vor COVID-19 schützen, Impfstoff wird wieder ein normaleres Berufsleben ermöglichen, Impfstoff wird das Reisen ermöglichen, Impfstoff wird Treffen mit Familie und Freunden ermöglichen, Impfstoff wird Restaurantbesuche und andere Aktivitäten wieder ermöglichen; Wichtigkeit der folgenden Gründe im Hinblick auf die Entscheidung, sich nicht impfen zu lassen: Pandemie wird bald vorbei sein, persönliches Infektionsrisiko ist sehr gering, Risiko durch COVID-19 ist allgemein übertrieben, Sorgen über die Nebenwirkungen von COVID-19-Impfstoffen, Impfstoffe sind noch nicht ausreichend getestet, Impfstoffe sind unwirksam, generelle Ablehnung von Impfungen; Faktoren, die die persönliche Impfbereitschaft erhöhen würden: mehr geimpfte Menschen im Umfeld, viele erfolgreich geimpfte Menschen ohne gravierende Nebenwirkungen, Menschen, die die Impfung empfehlen, sind selbst geimpft, Empfehlung des eigenen Arztes, Entwicklung der Impfstoffe in der Europäischen Union, vollständige Klarheit über Entwicklung, Testung und Zulassung der Impfstoffe, starker Wunsch nach einer Impfung bzw. Befragte/r ist bereits geimpft, keine Impfung geplant; Einstellung zu den folgenden Aussagen zu den Impfstoffen: Vorteile überwiegen mögliche Risiken, in der EU zugelassene Impfstoffe sind sicher, zu schnelle Entwicklung, Testung und Zulassung der Impfstoffe, um sicher zu sein, noch unbekannte potentielle Langzeit-Nebenwirkungen, Impfung ist die einzige Möglichkeit zur Beendigung der Pandemie, kein Verständnis für Impfgegner, Ausrottung ernsthafter Krankheiten durch Impfung; Einstellung zu den folgenden Aussagen: Ansteckung kann auch ohne Impfung vermieden werden, mangelnde Transparenz öffentlicher Behörden in Bezug auf die Corona-Impfstoffe, Impfung gegen COVID-19 ist Bürgerpflicht, Impfung sollte verpflichtend sein, Europäische Union spielt wesentliche Rolle bei der Versorgung des eigenen Landes mit Impfstoff; vertrauenswürdigste Institutionen oder Personen im Hinblick auf die Bereitstellung von Informationen über Corona-Impfstoffe; Interesse an zusätzlichen Informationen über die folgenden Aspekte: Entwicklung, Testung und Zulassung von COVID-19-Impfstoffen, Sicherheit von COVID-19- Impfstoffen, Effektivität von COVID-19-Impfstoffen; Zufriedenheit mit der Handhabung der Impfstrategie durch: nationale Regierung, EU; Anwendbarkeit der folgenden Aussagen: Befragter kennt Menschen mit positivem Corona-Testergebnis, Befragter kennt Menschen mit Corona-Erkrankung, Befragter hatte positives Corona-Testergebnis, Befragter Corona-Erkrankung, Befragter fürchtet Ansteckung in der Zukunft; Impfung des Befragten als: Kind, Erwachsener; Einstellung zu Impfstoffen im allgemeinen: sind sicher, sind wirksam. Demographie: Alter; Geschlecht; Nationalität; Alter bei Beendigung der Ausbildung; Beruf; berufliche Stellung; Urbanisierungsgrad; Haushaltszusammensetzung und Haushaltsgröße; Region. Zusätzlich verkodet wurde: Befragten-ID; Land; für das Interview genutztes Gerät; Nationengruppe; Gewichtungsfaktor. Attitudes on vaccination against Covid-19. Topics: preferred time for getting vaccinated; importance of each of the following issues with regard to getting vaccinated: vaccine will help to end the pandemic, vaccine will protect respondent from getting Covid-19, vaccine will protect relatives and others from getting Covid-19, vaccine will make it possible to resume a more normal professional life, vaccine will make it possible to travel, vaccine will make it possible to meet family and friends, vaccine will make it possible to go to restaurants, cinemas etc.; importance of each of the following issues with regard to not getting vaccinated: pandemic will be over soon, personal risk of being infected is very low, risk posed by Covid-19 in general is exaggerated, worries about side effects of Covid-19 vaccines, vaccines have not been sufficiently tested yet, vaccines are ineffective, against vaccines in general; factors to increase personal willingness of getting vaccinated: more people around doing it, more people have already been vaccinated and we see that there are no major side-effects, people that recommend the vaccines are vaccinated themselves, doctor recommends respondent to do so, vaccines are developed in the European Union, full clarity on how vaccines are being developed, tested and authorized, respondent is very eager to get vaccinated or is already vaccinated, won’t get vaccinated anyway; attitude towards the following statements on the vaccines: benefits outweigh possible risks, vaccines authorised in the European Union are safe, vaccines are being developed, tested and authorised too quickly to be safe, vaccines could have long term side-effects that we do not know yet, a vaccine is the only way to end the pandemic, no understanding why people are reluctant to get vaccinated, serious diseases have disappeared thanks to vaccines; attitude towards the following statements: one can avoid being infected without being vaccinated, public authorities are not sufficiently transparent about COVID-19 vaccines, getting vaccinated against COVID-19 is a civic duty, vaccination should be compulsory, European Union is playing a key role in ensuring access to COVID-19 vaccines in the own country; most trustworthy institutions or persons regarding the provision of information about COVID-19 vaccines; interest in additional information about the following aspects: development, testing, and authorization of COVID-19 vaccines, safety of COVID-19 vaccines, effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines; satisfaction with the handling of the vaccination strategy by: national government, EU; applicability of the following statements: respondent knows people who have tested positive to COVID-19, respondent knows people who have been ill because of COVID-19, respondent has tested positive to COVID-19, respondent has been ill because of COVID-19, respondent fears to be infected in the future; vaccination of respondent: as a child, as an adult; attitude towards vaccines in general: are safe, are effective. Demography: age; sex; nationality; age at end of education; occupation; professional position; type of community; household composition and household size; region. Additionally coded was: respondent ID; country; device used for interview; nation group; weighting factor.
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TwitterAs of March 20, 2023, over 13 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses had been administered worldwide, with the United States accounting for almost 672 million of this total. This statistic shows the number of COVID-19 vaccine doses administered worldwide as of March 20, 2023, by country.
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TwitterAs of January 18, 2023, Portugal had the highest COVID-19 vaccination rate in Europe having administered 272.78 doses per 100 people in the country, while Malta had administered 258.49 doses per 100. The UK was the first country in Europe to approve the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for widespread use and began inoculations on December 8, 2020, and so far have administered 224.04 doses per 100. At the latest data, Belgium had carried out 253.89 doses of vaccines per 100 population. Russia became the first country in the world to authorize a vaccine - named Sputnik V - for use in the fight against COVID-19 in August 2020. As of August 4, 2022, Russia had administered 127.3 doses per 100 people in the country.
The seven-day rate of cases across Europe shows an ongoing perspective of which countries are worst affected by the virus relative to their population. For further information about the coronavirus pandemic, please visit our dedicated Facts and Figures page.