Canadians’ appetite for vaccines rose with second wave, StatsCan says

As infections soared, mental health declined and openness to inoculation increased

client and advisor with masks on

With the third wave of Covid-19 gaining momentum, new research from Statistics Canada shows that willingness to receive a vaccine against the virus rose during the second wave, while mental health declined.

The national statistical agency released a report on Friday showing that during the second wave of Covid-19 infections from November to mid-December, 80.4% of Canadians reported they were somewhat or very likely to get a vaccine. That was up from 75.5% in September.

Older Canadians were slightly more willing: 82.5% of those aged 65 and older said they would get vaccinated, compared with 75.5% of those aged 12 to 64.

StasCan also reported that the proportion of Canadians taking precautions against infection rose during the second wave, with 80.8% saying that they avoided leaving the house for non-essential reasons from November to mid-December, up from 67.0% in September.

At the same time, the share of Canadians reporting that their mental health had declined since the start of the pandemic jumped from 29.6% in September to 37.3% from November to mid-December.