Matthews Luke J, Nowak Sarah A, Gidengil Courtney C, Chen Christine, Stubbersfield Joseph M, Tehrani Jamshid J, Parker Andrew M
RAND Corporation Boston MA 02116 USA.
Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine University of Vermont Burlington VT 05405 USA.
Am Anthropol. 2022 Jun;124(2):291-306. doi: 10.1111/aman.13714. Epub 2022 Feb 26.
We conducted a nationally representative survey of parents' beliefs and self-reported behaviors regarding childhood vaccinations. Using Bayesian selection among multivariate models, we found that beliefs, even those without any vaccine or health content, predicted vaccine-hesitant behaviors better than demographics, social network effects, or scientific reasoning. The multivariate structure of beliefs combined many types of ideation that included concerns about both conspiracies and side effects. Although they are not strongly related to vaccine-hesitant behavior, demographics were key predictors of beliefs. Our results support some of the previously proposed pro-vaccination messaging strategies and suggest some new strategies not previously considered.
我们针对家长们对儿童疫苗接种的看法及自我报告的行为开展了一项具有全国代表性的调查。通过在多变量模型中进行贝叶斯选择,我们发现,看法,即使是那些没有任何疫苗或健康相关内容的看法,比人口统计学因素、社交网络影响或科学推理,能更好地预测疫苗犹豫行为。看法的多变量结构结合了多种类型的思维方式,包括对阴谋和副作用的担忧。虽然人口统计学因素与疫苗犹豫行为的关联不强,但却是看法的关键预测因素。我们的研究结果支持了一些先前提出的支持疫苗接种的宣传策略,并提出了一些之前未被考虑的新策略。