| Literature DB >> 26635296 |
Sander L van der Linden1, Chris E Clarke2, Edward W Maibach2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A substantial minority of American adults continue to hold influential misperceptions about childhood vaccine safety. Growing public concern and refusal to vaccinate poses a serious public health risk. Evaluations of recent pro-vaccine health communication interventions have revealed mixed results (at best). This study investigated whether highlighting consensus among medical scientists about childhood vaccine safety can lower public concern, reduce key misperceptions about the discredited autism-vaccine link and promote overall support for vaccines.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635296 PMCID: PMC4669673 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2541-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Main effect of highlighting scientific consensus on dependent variables
| Dependent variables | Mean consensus treatments | Mean control group | Cohen’s D |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ||
| Perceived scientific agreement |
| 83.93 (2.65) | 0.60 |
| Endorsement autism-vaccine link |
| 3.07 (0.34) | 0.55 |
| Risk perception |
| 3.51 (0.35) | 0.31 |
| Public support/attitudes |
| 5.66 (0.24) | 0.44 |
Note: Standard errors in parentheses. All mean comparisons significant at *** p < 0.01 (bold face). Unequal variances assumed. Cohen’s D is a standardized measure of effect size. Values between 0.3 and 0.6 are generally considered to be “moderate” effect-sizes in behavioral science [25]
Fig. 1Perceived scientific agreement as a “gateway belief” mediation (path) model
Sample characteristics
| Sample | ( |
|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |
| Gender (% male) | 56 |
| Female | 44 |
| Age (% 25–34) | 41 |
| 18–24 | 12 |
| 35–44 | 23 |
| 45–54 | 12 |
| 55–64 | 9 |
| 65–74 | 2 |
| 75+ | 1 |
| Education (% college degree or higher) | 55 |
| Less than High School | 2 |
| High School | 7 |
| Some College | 36 |
| Region % (South) | 33 |
| Midwest | 28 |
| Northeast | 22 |
| West | 17 |
| Party Affiliation (% Democrat) | 45 |
| Republican | 28 |
| Independent | 27 |
Note: Modal category is reported first. Respondents were recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk. Restrictions included location (United States) and a worker’s past approval rate (95 % or higher). Compared to the general U.S. national population, participants were more likely to be male, younger, higher educated, and self-identify as a Democrat
Survey questions and descriptive statistics
| Sample | Mean (S.D.) |
|---|---|
| Survey questions | |
| Perceived scientific agreement | |
| To the best of your knowledge, what % of medical scientists agree that vaccines are safe? (0–100 %). | 88.39 (11.41) |
| Autism-vaccine link | |
| To what extent do you agree with the following statement; “there is scientific evidence for a causal link between vaccines and autism” (1 = Completely Disagree – 7 = Completely Agree). | 2.43 (1.77) |
| Risk perception / concern | |
| How concerned are you about the potential risk of vaccines? (1 = I am not concerned at all, 7 = I am very concerned). | 3.06 (1.92) |
| Public support index (Strongly Disagree = 1, Strongly Agree = 7). | 6.20 (1.24) |
| I believe that vaccines are a safe and reliable way to avoid the spread of otherwise preventable diseases ( | |
| I have already vaccinated my children or would do so if I had children ( | |
| I would support policies that require people to vaccinate their children ( | |
| I believe that the health benefits of vaccines outweigh the risk of any potential negative side effects ( | |
| I believe that vaccines are important in maintaining and improving public health ( | |
| In the interest of public health, parents should simply be required to vaccinate their children ( | |
| More people ought to vaccinate themselves and their children ( | |
| I believe that vaccine refusal poses a risk to public health ( | |