Texas A&M University, United States.
Oklahoma State University, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2019 Oct;238:112407. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112407. Epub 2019 Jul 29.
The study of vaccine hesitancy identifies parental decisions to delay childhood vaccinations as an important public health issue, with consequences for immunization rates, the pursuit of nonmedical exemptions in states, and disease outbreaks. While prior work has explored the demographic and social underpinnings of parental decisions to delay childhood vaccinations, little is known about how the psychological dispositions of parents are associated with this choice. We analyze public opinion data to assess the role of psychological factors in reported parental decisions to delay childhood vaccination.
We anticipate that parents with certain psychological characteristics will be more likely to delay childhood vaccination. Specifically, we explore the roles of conspiratorial thinking, dispositions towards needle sensitivity, and moral purity; expecting that parents with high levels of any of these characteristics will be more likely to delay vaccinating their children.
In an original survey of 4010 American parents weighted to population benchmarks, we asked parents about delay-related vaccination behavior, demographic questions, and several psychological batteries. We then developed a vaccination delay scale and modeled delay as a function of conspiratorial thinking, needle sensitivity, moral purity, and relevant demographic controls. We then re-specified our models to look specifically at the predictors of delaying HPV vaccination, which has a low uptake rate in the United States.
Controlling for other common predictors of hesitant behavior, we find that parents with high levels of conspiratorial thinking and needle sensitivity are more likely to report pursuing alternative vaccination schedules. When analyzing the specific decision by parents to delay HPV vaccination, we find that tendencies towards moral purity and, in turn, sexual deviance are also associated with vaccine seeking behavior.
Parental decisions to delay childhood vaccinations are an important public health concern that are associated with conspiratorial thinking and needle sensitivity.
疫苗犹豫的研究将父母决定延迟儿童疫苗接种视为一个重要的公共卫生问题,这对免疫率、各州非医学豁免的追求以及疾病爆发都有影响。虽然之前的工作已经探讨了父母决定延迟儿童疫苗接种的人口统计学和社会基础,但对于父母的心理特征如何与这一选择相关知之甚少。我们分析了公众意见数据,以评估心理因素在报告的父母决定延迟儿童疫苗接种中的作用。
我们预计具有某些心理特征的父母更有可能延迟儿童疫苗接种。具体而言,我们探讨了阴谋思维、对针的敏感性以及道德纯洁性的作用;预计具有这些特征的父母中,具有较高水平的任何特征的父母更有可能延迟为孩子接种疫苗。
在一项针对 4010 名美国父母的原始调查中,我们对与延迟相关的疫苗接种行为、人口统计学问题和几个心理测试进行了调查。然后,我们制定了一个疫苗接种延迟量表,并将延迟行为建模为阴谋思维、针敏感性、道德纯洁性和相关人口统计学控制因素的函数。然后,我们重新指定了模型,专门研究 HPV 疫苗接种延迟的预测因素,因为 HPV 疫苗在美国的接种率较低。
在控制其他常见犹豫行为的预测因素后,我们发现,阴谋思维和针敏感性较高的父母更有可能报告寻求替代疫苗接种时间表。当分析父母具体决定延迟 HPV 疫苗接种时,我们发现道德纯洁性的倾向,进而性变态也与疫苗寻求行为有关。
父母决定延迟儿童疫苗接种是一个重要的公共卫生问题,与阴谋思维和针敏感性有关。