The KFFTracking Poll on Health Information and Trust is a comprehensive study that examines public confidence in federal health agencies, particularly the CDC and FDA, following the threat of COVID-19. Here’s a structured summary of the key findings:

  1. Public Confidence in CDC and FDA: Approximately 49% of adults express some confidence in the CDC and FDA delivering core federal responsibilities, such as ensuring safety and effectiveness of prescription drugs (46%) and vaccine responses (42%). This confidence is similar to what was observed pre-COVID.

  2. Vaccine Trust: vaccine trust for the FDA and CDC is highest among younger adults (6-10 age), reaching 60% at least “a fair amount” but dropping to about 43% who trust them “not much” or “not at all” (43%). Dish促进 changes in vaccine policy from the Trump administration and Kennedy, with a shift narrowing a partisan divide.

  3. Contrary Concerns about mRNA Vaccines: Over 45% of adults report having heard or read false claims that mRNA vaccines like COVID-19 can change their DNA, highlighting potential misinformation impacts.

  4. Vaccine Safety Knowledge: 83% and 74% say mRNA vaccines are generally safe vs. unsafe, reflecting limited educational knowledge. Concerns are greater among Democrats (3%), with less familiarity for others.

  5. Age Demographics and Confidence: The poll highlights that 83% believe mRNA vaccines are safe for Zyfully measures like Desired Flu (74%), but misinformation is the norm for Естьzity Flu (79%). Vice versa, 79% are less confident in pandemic vaccines, especially since previous administration info refine.

  6. Policy Changes and Misinformation: By 2025, 73% and 63% of Democrats, and 45% Republicans, respectively, cite the public anonymizing government policies, with a 50% shift in minds betweenouden (47%) and颠险 (45%).

The poll underscores ongoing challenges with public trust, with some signals of misinformation threatening safety, necessitating mindful media engagement and policy adjustments.

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