Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”
Serious as the problem is of Americans being resistant to vaccinate their children, I haven’t previously asked the Erinyes to weigh in on it. That’s because, serious as it is, I found it somewhat amorphous – difficult to know what to do or how to approach. However, Timothy Callaghan and Matt Motta tie this issue to all other issues on a way that really got my attention, and will probably get yours too. More on that point after the article.
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Conspiracy theories and fear of needles contribute to vaccine hesitancy for many parents
Timothy Callaghan, Texas A&M University and Matt Motta, Oklahoma State University
Over 1,160 cases of measles have been confirmed in the U.S. in 2019. That is more measles cases in just seven months than any full year this decade, and, more problematically, more than all U.S. measles cases from 2010-2013 and 2015-2017 combined.
Lawmakers in some states, such as Washington and New York, are already stepping in to combat the outbreak by eliminating certain exemptions from vaccination. We will soon know whether these new policies produce higher vaccination rates.
However, a fundamental question remains: Why are some parents – despite the scientific community’s conclusions that childhood vaccines are safe – putting their children at risk by not vaccinating them in the first place? Public health experts and health behavior scholars like us have been trying to solve this mystery for years.
Why don’t some parents vaccinate?
Religious beliefs or barriers to accessing health services certainly explain the actions of some, but these factors do not explain the behavior of most parents who choose not to vaccinate. Instead, recent academic research
suggests that most parents who display vaccine hesitancy – by either refusing to vaccinate their children or delaying vaccination past recommended vaccine schedules – do so because of misinformation about vaccine safety, their political ideology, the influence of social media, and other factors like economic circumstances and trust.
As important as these factors are, we wondered if the behavior of vaccine-hesitant parents might also have deeper, psychological origins. For that reason, in a new paper published in Social Science and Medicine, we analyzed the possibility that parental decisions to delay vaccinating children could be driven by three underlying psychological factors: conspiratorial thinking, needle sensitivity and moral purity.
Facts don’t matter when people don’t trust them
People with conspiratorial styles of thinking tend to believe that the government, businesses and other powerful actors conspire to influence a wide range of social and political events in the world around us. They don’t necessarily believe any one particular conspiracy theory – such as the belief that NASA faked the Moon landing, or that someone other than Lee Harvey Oswald killed President John F. Kennedy. Still, because many conspiracy theories involve collusion between powerful actors, these people are more likely than the typical American to belief in conspiracy theories generally.
Given the variety of conspiracy theories surrounding vaccine safety, including disproven theories that vaccines cause autism or that pharmaceutical companies are hiding the dangers of vaccines, we wanted to test whether parents with tendencies toward conspiratorial styles of thought may be more likely to delay vaccinating their children because they have internalized these conspiracies.
Needle fear and vaccine behavior
In addition, we also wanted to see whether parents who are afraid of or are otherwise averse to needles themselves – what psychologists call “needle sensitivity” – are less likely to vaccinate their children when they are supposed to. Prior research suggests that as many as 24% of adults have a fear of needles and that up to 90% of 15-18 month old children and 45% of children aged 4 to 6 are seriously distressed by injections.
Given these statistics, we wanted to see whether some parental decisions not to vaccinate weren’t necessarily because they thought vaccines were dangerous, but because the parents were afraid of needles and didn’t want to put their children through something that causes them so much distress.
The role of bodily sanctity
Finally, we wanted to test whether a notion called moral purity – an aversion to actions that violate bodily sanctity – might also explain parental anti-vax behavior.
Individuals with high levels of moral purity try to avoid experiences that induce disgust, violate sanctity or corrupt the body. While vaccines are widely regarded as safe, we, like some other scholars studying related topics, hypothesized that some might see the injection of the disease antigens found in vaccines as a violation of the body’s purity that should be avoided in their children.
Psychological predictors of parental vaccine behavior
To test our hypotheses, we asked more than 4,000 American parents in a September 2018 survey about the vaccination decisions they made for their children and why they made those decisions. Specifically, we asked parents if they had ever delayed vaccinating their children, if they had only vaccinated their children because they had to for school, if they had chosen their child’s doctor based on their willingness to delay vaccinating, and if they would be willing to relocate their families so their child could attend a school that does not require vaccination.
Before asking these questions, we also gave survey respondents a series of questions designed to measure conspiratorial thinking, needle sensitivity and moral purity, as well as standard demographic questions.
In support of our expectations, we found that parents with high levels of conspiratorial thinking were 15% more likely to report delaying their children’s vaccinations. They were also 11% more likely to report having chosen their doctors based on their willingness to delay, 25% more likely to report only vaccinating their children so they can enroll in school, and 18% more likely to claim that they would be willing to relocate to a new school district.
We also found that parents’ psychological dispositions toward needles influenced reported anti-vaccination behavior. Parents in our study with high levels of sensitivity toward needles were between 14-16% more likely to engage in the each of the delay behaviors included in our study. This would suggest that if needle-free vaccine delivery mechanisms were more widespread, we might get many of these children their vaccines on time. Inconsistent with our predictions, we found no evidence that parents’ beliefs in moral purity altered their vaccine decision-making for their children, broadly speaking.
A difficult process
Our research suggests that anti-vaccine attitudes have deeply grounded psychological origins, which may be quite difficult to change. Consequently, our work identifies an important challenge for medical professionals, health departments and scientists: How can they convince vaccine hesitant parents to vaccinate their children, when it is unlikely that they’ll be able to make parents stop fearing needles, or to stop endorsing a conspiratorial way of thinking?
One possibility is to present information about vaccines to parents strategically, using the psychological factors identified here as important determinants of anti-vaccine behavior as a guide. For example, if we know that parents who are prone to thinking in conspiratorial ways are less likely to want to vaccinate their children, efforts to encourage childhood vaccination may be more successful if we avoid making mention of scientific studies, which parents might see as motivated by ulterior motives, or tying information to health departments (which these parents might find untrustworthy).
Figuring out which communication strategies are most effective for different audiences is something academics and science communicators still need to test. We hope, however, that our work offers a useful starting point for doing precisely this.
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Timothy Callaghan, Assistant Professor, Texas A&M University School of Public Health, Texas A&M University and Matt Motta, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Oklahoma State University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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This simple statement is so much bigger than just vaccinations – important though those are. It speaks to everything that is wrong with our nation, indeed with the world, particularly today.
Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, if you can come up with a solution, or even one or more partial solutions, to this, you will save the world. That’s the bottom line.
The Furies and I will be back.
Cross posted to Care2 HERE.
11 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #177”
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Good one JD!
I bet Nameless will have a good comment. In the meantime, quarantine anti-vax nut jobs!
If he’s feeling up to a good comment, that will be very good indeed.
I might address this issue later, but it’s a lot to chomp through – and JD has done a superlative job!
What a fascinating and interesting read.
When my kids were babies, I was religious in getting their vaccinations, to prevent them from getting diseases, or if they did, (measles, chickenpox..etc.), it wasn’t as bad, as to not getting the shot.
Also, it was a requirement (and necessity) in getting a hospital/doctor’s card with the dates, and what shots they received to show school administrators that they…in fact received necessary inoculations at registration, so that they could attend school.
With me being a mom/granma, I can’t wrap my head around the subject of not vaccinating a baby or child. I would never endanger a child (their life), like that. I’ve never run into a person with the opinion of NOT vaccinating their child, either. imho. Call me flummoxed.
Personally…I have an averse feeling regarding needles, but that doesn’t stop me from getting blood drawn, or getting a vax if needed.
Thanks, Joanne for a great post, and Furies too!
That was, indeed, quite interesting. Moral purity? Reminds me of “Purity of Essence,” out of “Dr. Strangelove!” I am left wondering how much, if any, of the fear of gov’t conspiracies stems from the country’s history of having been lied into the Spanish-American War, the Vietnam war, and Iraq!! And now, the Empty Orange has been trying to find an excuse to go to war with Iran.
The problem with the “purity” pillar of morality (to use Jonathan Haidt’s phrase) is that everyone has one, but it means such different things to different people. To some it means sexuality, which is where we get all the homophobes and others with weird hangups. To some, it’s purity regarding what one puts into one’s mouth, which is where the health nuts come from. To some it means avoiding corruption – and that’s how the Russians got to some liberals in 2016. It wasn’t unreasonable to suspect it might be a factor – it’s even a little bit surprising that it doesn’t seem to be.
For better or worse, by the time I retired this was not a big issue – at least not like it is now.
Conspiracy theory zealots of most all stripes scare me!
Me too. That’s why i was even more focused on the issue of what is factual than I was even on the story itself. To the point f making it a “meme.” A big “meme.”
Thank you for the lavish compliment, and glad you appear to be feeling better? Hope it’s not just stoicism.
Great post, Joanne
I like Pat faithfully took care of getting my son’s vaccinations. In the seventies eighties and nineties it was required for him to go to the schools.
It frightens me to see so many parents who choose not to get them now, with all of the massive amounts of chickenpox, measles popping up all over the world.
The chances of anyone having serious effects from these vaccines to me, isn’t worth it. To have them come down with the disease is much scarier.
Great read, Joanne. Thank you for posting this artice on such an important, but touchy subject.
From other surveys I learned that, unlike facts produced by the science of global warming/ climate change, the scientific facts of vaccination, or rather the disproved facts of it such as causation of autism, are not believed, or distrusted, by highly-educated people.
This may caused by the facts that come from medical research in this area, often being linked in people’s mind to the research coming out of the pharmaceutical industry, the tobacco industry or the large chemical companies, of for example Monsanto (now Bayer), which have been shown to be quite untrustworthy in some cases. Some conspiracy theories about pharmaceutical or tobacco companies trying to get people hooked on their product, turned out not to be very far fetched after all.
Because of the growing distrust in these industries, it is hard for people, no matter their level of education, to appreciate and accept the facts produced by bona fide, independent research institutes on products coming from a distrusted source, such as vaccines made by the pharmaceutical industry.
The furies may do well by keeping science out of the equation to help solve the problem in instances of conspiracy thinking, but may also need to find a way to convince those who are not conspiracy-theory prone, but justly distrust motives of certain industries, to look at facts and ther source differently.
You’re right, of course, and they did allude to that.
One big thing people mention being afraid of (the crux of the autism theory) is that they believe the culprit, particularly the culprit for autism, to the the mercury used as a preservative. On its face, that’s not idiotic. Mercury has been responsible for a lot of deaths and brain damage (the saying “mad as a hatter” derives from hatters using mercury to stabilize hats, and breathing the fumes, with disturbing results), But mercury isn’t all the same, for one thing, and the variety of mercury used in vaccinations is the kind that exits the system rapidly. The other thing is, such a small quantity is used that a a fetus could be exposed to many times more mercury if its mother eats one tuna sandwich than a child would from a vaccination. And the mercury which turns up in tuna is not the kind which exits the system quickly. That got my attention (because tuna is a staple for me), but then I’m not a conspiracy theorist.