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Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters: Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes

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Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters: Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes. / Rossen, Isabel; Hurlstone, Mark John; Dunlop, Patrick et al.
In: Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 224, 01.03.2019, p. 23-27.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Rossen, I, Hurlstone, MJ, Dunlop, P & Lawrence, C 2019, 'Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters: Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes', Social Science and Medicine, vol. 224, pp. 23-27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.01.038

APA

Vancouver

Rossen I, Hurlstone MJ, Dunlop P, Lawrence C. Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters: Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes. Social Science and Medicine. 2019 Mar 1;224:23-27. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.01.038

Author

Rossen, Isabel ; Hurlstone, Mark John ; Dunlop, Patrick et al. / Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters : Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes. In: Social Science and Medicine. 2019 ; Vol. 224. pp. 23-27.

Bibtex

@article{b75187323ddc44c19fddc9e2a4628fc3,
title = "Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters: Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes",
abstract = "RationaleChildhood vaccination is a safe and effective way of reducing infectious diseases. Yet, public confidence in vaccination is waning, driven in part by the {\textquoteleft}manufacture of doubt{\textquoteright} by anti-vaccination activists and websites. However, there is little research examining the psychological underpinnings of anti-vaccination rhetoric among parents.ObjectivesHere, we examined the structure and moral roots of anti-vaccination attitudes amongst Australian parents active on social media parenting sites.MethodsParticipants (N = 296) completed questionnaires assessing their vaccination attitudes, behavioural intentions, and moral preferences.ResultsUsing Latent Profile Analysis, we identified three profiles (i.e., groups), interpretable as vaccine “accepters”, “fence sitters”, and “rejecters”, each characterised by a distinct pattern of vaccination attitudes and moral preferences. Accepters exhibited positive vaccination attitudes and strong intentions to vaccinate; rejecters exhibited the opposite pattern of responses; whilst fence sitters exhibited an intermediate pattern of responses. Compared to accepters, rejecters and fence sitters exhibited a heightened moral preference for liberty (belief in the rights of the individual) and harm (concern about the wellbeing of others). Compared to acceptors and fence sitters, rejecters exhibited a heightened moral preference for purity (an abhorrence for impurity of body), and a diminished moral preference for authority (deference to those in positions of power).ConclusionGiven the sensitivity of fence sitters and rejecters to liberty-related moral concerns, our research cautions against the use of adversarial approaches—e.g., No Jab, No Pay legislation—that promote vaccination uptake by restricting parental freedoms, as they may backfire amongst parents ambivalent toward vaccination.",
author = "Isabel Rossen and Hurlstone, {Mark John} and Patrick Dunlop and Carmen Lawrence",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.01.038",
language = "English",
volume = "224",
pages = "23--27",
journal = "Social Science and Medicine",
issn = "0277-9536",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Accepters, fence sitters, or rejecters

T2 - Moral profiles of vaccination attitudes

AU - Rossen, Isabel

AU - Hurlstone, Mark John

AU - Dunlop, Patrick

AU - Lawrence, Carmen

PY - 2019/3/1

Y1 - 2019/3/1

N2 - RationaleChildhood vaccination is a safe and effective way of reducing infectious diseases. Yet, public confidence in vaccination is waning, driven in part by the ‘manufacture of doubt’ by anti-vaccination activists and websites. However, there is little research examining the psychological underpinnings of anti-vaccination rhetoric among parents.ObjectivesHere, we examined the structure and moral roots of anti-vaccination attitudes amongst Australian parents active on social media parenting sites.MethodsParticipants (N = 296) completed questionnaires assessing their vaccination attitudes, behavioural intentions, and moral preferences.ResultsUsing Latent Profile Analysis, we identified three profiles (i.e., groups), interpretable as vaccine “accepters”, “fence sitters”, and “rejecters”, each characterised by a distinct pattern of vaccination attitudes and moral preferences. Accepters exhibited positive vaccination attitudes and strong intentions to vaccinate; rejecters exhibited the opposite pattern of responses; whilst fence sitters exhibited an intermediate pattern of responses. Compared to accepters, rejecters and fence sitters exhibited a heightened moral preference for liberty (belief in the rights of the individual) and harm (concern about the wellbeing of others). Compared to acceptors and fence sitters, rejecters exhibited a heightened moral preference for purity (an abhorrence for impurity of body), and a diminished moral preference for authority (deference to those in positions of power).ConclusionGiven the sensitivity of fence sitters and rejecters to liberty-related moral concerns, our research cautions against the use of adversarial approaches—e.g., No Jab, No Pay legislation—that promote vaccination uptake by restricting parental freedoms, as they may backfire amongst parents ambivalent toward vaccination.

AB - RationaleChildhood vaccination is a safe and effective way of reducing infectious diseases. Yet, public confidence in vaccination is waning, driven in part by the ‘manufacture of doubt’ by anti-vaccination activists and websites. However, there is little research examining the psychological underpinnings of anti-vaccination rhetoric among parents.ObjectivesHere, we examined the structure and moral roots of anti-vaccination attitudes amongst Australian parents active on social media parenting sites.MethodsParticipants (N = 296) completed questionnaires assessing their vaccination attitudes, behavioural intentions, and moral preferences.ResultsUsing Latent Profile Analysis, we identified three profiles (i.e., groups), interpretable as vaccine “accepters”, “fence sitters”, and “rejecters”, each characterised by a distinct pattern of vaccination attitudes and moral preferences. Accepters exhibited positive vaccination attitudes and strong intentions to vaccinate; rejecters exhibited the opposite pattern of responses; whilst fence sitters exhibited an intermediate pattern of responses. Compared to accepters, rejecters and fence sitters exhibited a heightened moral preference for liberty (belief in the rights of the individual) and harm (concern about the wellbeing of others). Compared to acceptors and fence sitters, rejecters exhibited a heightened moral preference for purity (an abhorrence for impurity of body), and a diminished moral preference for authority (deference to those in positions of power).ConclusionGiven the sensitivity of fence sitters and rejecters to liberty-related moral concerns, our research cautions against the use of adversarial approaches—e.g., No Jab, No Pay legislation—that promote vaccination uptake by restricting parental freedoms, as they may backfire amongst parents ambivalent toward vaccination.

U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.01.038

DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.01.038

M3 - Journal article

VL - 224

SP - 23

EP - 27

JO - Social Science and Medicine

JF - Social Science and Medicine

SN - 0277-9536

ER -