Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > ‘I am still unsure…’ – Spontaneous expressions ...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

‘I am still unsure…’ – Spontaneous expressions of vaccine indecision on Mumsnet

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

‘I am still unsure…’ – Spontaneous expressions of vaccine indecision on Mumsnet. / Demjen, Zsofia; Brezina, Vaclav; Coltman-Patel, Tara et al.
In: Applied Corpus Linguistics, Vol. 5, No. 1, 100122, 30.04.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Demjen Z, Brezina V, Coltman-Patel T, Dance W, Gleave R, Hardaker C et al. ‘I am still unsure…’ – Spontaneous expressions of vaccine indecision on Mumsnet. Applied Corpus Linguistics. 2025 Apr 30;5(1):100122. Epub 2025 Feb 5. doi: 10.1016/j.acorp.2025.100122

Author

Bibtex

@article{92d1c6c67ec84d15aceee0337ad2d770,
title = "{\textquoteleft}I am still unsure…{\textquoteright} – Spontaneous expressions of vaccine indecision on Mumsnet",
abstract = "Vaccination programmes in 90% of countries in the world have been affected by {\textquoteleft}vaccine hesitancy{\textquoteright}. Childhood vaccinations are particularly important as declining vaccination rates have led to the resurfacing of communicable diseases previously considered eliminated. Therefore, we examine parents{\textquoteright} unelicited expressions of vaccine indecision –dilemmas, hesitations and concerns related to vaccinating– at the point of decision-making. We combine discourse analysis and corpus linguistics (text dispersion keywords and concordancing) to compare 422 Original Posts from the forum of the UK-based parenting website Mumsnet that outline vaccine indecision to vaccination discussions that do not involve indecision. We examine what characterises authentic vaccine indecision in the localised context of Mumsnet. Specifically, which vaccines Mumsnet users are undecided about; what concerns are linked to indecision; and how such concerns are raised in a generally pro-vaccination online space. Our method combines advantages of large datasets with those of nuanced and localised qualitative analysis. The vaccine that consistently concerns parents is MMR. Concerns about other vaccines fluctuate with disease outbreaks and the introduction of new vaccines. The concerns linked to indecision include the mode and timing of vaccinations, particular personal and family circumstances and an unspecific notion of side effects. Mumsnet users invite details about others' personal experiences to fill a need left by widely available general vaccine information. The implication is that health services may need to redirect resources from mass population level campaigns to more personalised approaches for parents who are hesitant about specific vaccines at particular points in time.",
author = "Zsofia Demjen and Vaclav Brezina and Tara Coltman-Patel and William Dance and Richard Gleave and Claire Hardaker and Elena Semino",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.acorp.2025.100122",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "Applied Corpus Linguistics",
issn = "2666-7991",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ‘I am still unsure…’ – Spontaneous expressions of vaccine indecision on Mumsnet

AU - Demjen, Zsofia

AU - Brezina, Vaclav

AU - Coltman-Patel, Tara

AU - Dance, William

AU - Gleave, Richard

AU - Hardaker, Claire

AU - Semino, Elena

PY - 2025/4/30

Y1 - 2025/4/30

N2 - Vaccination programmes in 90% of countries in the world have been affected by ‘vaccine hesitancy’. Childhood vaccinations are particularly important as declining vaccination rates have led to the resurfacing of communicable diseases previously considered eliminated. Therefore, we examine parents’ unelicited expressions of vaccine indecision –dilemmas, hesitations and concerns related to vaccinating– at the point of decision-making. We combine discourse analysis and corpus linguistics (text dispersion keywords and concordancing) to compare 422 Original Posts from the forum of the UK-based parenting website Mumsnet that outline vaccine indecision to vaccination discussions that do not involve indecision. We examine what characterises authentic vaccine indecision in the localised context of Mumsnet. Specifically, which vaccines Mumsnet users are undecided about; what concerns are linked to indecision; and how such concerns are raised in a generally pro-vaccination online space. Our method combines advantages of large datasets with those of nuanced and localised qualitative analysis. The vaccine that consistently concerns parents is MMR. Concerns about other vaccines fluctuate with disease outbreaks and the introduction of new vaccines. The concerns linked to indecision include the mode and timing of vaccinations, particular personal and family circumstances and an unspecific notion of side effects. Mumsnet users invite details about others' personal experiences to fill a need left by widely available general vaccine information. The implication is that health services may need to redirect resources from mass population level campaigns to more personalised approaches for parents who are hesitant about specific vaccines at particular points in time.

AB - Vaccination programmes in 90% of countries in the world have been affected by ‘vaccine hesitancy’. Childhood vaccinations are particularly important as declining vaccination rates have led to the resurfacing of communicable diseases previously considered eliminated. Therefore, we examine parents’ unelicited expressions of vaccine indecision –dilemmas, hesitations and concerns related to vaccinating– at the point of decision-making. We combine discourse analysis and corpus linguistics (text dispersion keywords and concordancing) to compare 422 Original Posts from the forum of the UK-based parenting website Mumsnet that outline vaccine indecision to vaccination discussions that do not involve indecision. We examine what characterises authentic vaccine indecision in the localised context of Mumsnet. Specifically, which vaccines Mumsnet users are undecided about; what concerns are linked to indecision; and how such concerns are raised in a generally pro-vaccination online space. Our method combines advantages of large datasets with those of nuanced and localised qualitative analysis. The vaccine that consistently concerns parents is MMR. Concerns about other vaccines fluctuate with disease outbreaks and the introduction of new vaccines. The concerns linked to indecision include the mode and timing of vaccinations, particular personal and family circumstances and an unspecific notion of side effects. Mumsnet users invite details about others' personal experiences to fill a need left by widely available general vaccine information. The implication is that health services may need to redirect resources from mass population level campaigns to more personalised approaches for parents who are hesitant about specific vaccines at particular points in time.

U2 - 10.1016/j.acorp.2025.100122

DO - 10.1016/j.acorp.2025.100122

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

JO - Applied Corpus Linguistics

JF - Applied Corpus Linguistics

SN - 2666-7991

IS - 1

M1 - 100122

ER -