CNRS-GREQAM-IDEP, Marseille, France.
Soc Sci Med. 2011 Jan;72(2):142-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.11.018. Epub 2010 Nov 27.
Vaccination campaigns to prevent the spread of epidemics are successful only if the targeted populations subscribe to the recommendations of health authorities. However, because compulsory vaccination is hardly conceivable in modern democracies, governments need to convince their populations through efficient and persuasive information campaigns. In the context of the swine-origin A (H1N1) 2009 pandemic, we use an interactive study among the general public in the South of France, with 175 participants, to explore what type of information can induce change in vaccination intentions at both aggregate and individual levels. We find that individual attitudes to vaccination are based on rational appraisal of the situation, and that it is information of a purely scientific nature that has the only significant positive effect on intention to vaccinate.
疫苗接种运动要想成功阻止传染病的传播,只有目标人群接受卫生当局的建议才行。然而,由于在现代民主国家几乎不可能实行强制接种,政府需要通过高效和有说服力的信息宣传活动来说服民众。在 2009 年猪源 A(H1N1)流感大流行的背景下,我们在法国南部对公众进行了一项互动研究,共有 175 名参与者,旨在探讨哪种类型的信息可以在总体和个体层面上改变疫苗接种意愿。我们发现,个人对疫苗接种的态度是基于对情况的理性评估,而只有纯粹的科学性质的信息对接种意愿有显著的积极影响。