| Literature DB >> 33715151 |
Matthew J Hornsey1, Martin Edwards1, Josep Lobera2, Celia Díaz-Catalán3, Fiona Kate Barlow4.
Abstract
Understanding the factors associated with vaccine scepticism is challenging because of the 'small-pockets' problem: The number of highly vaccine-sceptical people is low, and small subsamples such as these can be missed using traditional regression approaches. To overcome this problem, the current study (N = 5,200) used latent profile analysis to uncover six profiles, including two micro-communities of vaccine-sceptical people who have the potential to jeopardize vaccine-led herd immunity. The most vaccine-sceptical group (1.14%) was highly educated and expressed strong liberal tendencies. This group was also the most sceptical about genetically modified crops and nuclear energy, and most likely to receive news about science from the Internet. The second-most vaccine-sceptical group (3.4%) was young, poorly educated, and politically extreme (both left and right). In resolving the small-pockets problem, the current analyses also help reconcile competing theoretical perspectives about the role of education and political ideology in shaping anti-vaccination views.Entities:
Keywords: cultural cognition; identity-protective cognition; political ideology; rejection of science; vaccination hesitancy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33715151 DOI: 10.1111/bjop.12500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychol ISSN: 0007-1269