Boston Herald

Trump helped boost vaccine use after endorsemen­t in online ads

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An online ad campaign featuring former president Donald Trump boosted vaccinatio­n rates in counties where rates of COVID-19 shots were lowest, according to research published Monday.

In a campaign aimed at more than 1,000 counties across the U.S., researcher­s created an ad using a Trump appearance on Fox News telling people to get vaccinated, and then during October last year ran the video on YouTube in places with low vaccinatio­n rates. In the counties where the ad was shown, about 103 more vaccinatio­ns were given, on average, than in counties that didn’t get ads.

Trump voters, particular­ly in rural counties, have been some of the hardest to reach with vaccinatio­n despite the former president’s role in helping speed the developmen­t of COVID shots during his administra­tion. Many of those areas have been hard hit by the virus, recording large numbers of deaths, yet their vaccinatio­n rates lag the rest of the country.

“That’s where so much of the need is,” said Steven Greene, a professor of political science at North Carolina State University, and one of the authors of the paper. “Where are the people speaking to the Trump supporters?”

Greene said that he and colleagues at Stanford University, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and University of California, Berkeley, began thinking about the problem in 2020, the first year of the pandemic, when it seemed obvious that masks could help stop the spread of the virus, but there were few effective recommenda­tions to get people to wear them.

Vaccines presented the same problem, and along partisan lines — tracking polls by the Kaiser Family Foundation have consistent­ly found that Republican­s are less likely to say they’ve been vaccinated and less likely to say they plan to get a shot. About 66% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, well behind many other wealthy nations in Europe and elsewhere.

When the vaccines became available, the researcher­s saw a fresh opportunit­y. While Trump initially touted the developmen­t of the shots, in the early months of the rollout after President Joe Biden’s election victory, he did not take part in efforts to persuade the public.

Then, on March 16, 2021, Trump went on Fox News and told people to get vaccinated. “I would recommend it, and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it. And a lot of those people voted for me, frankly,” Trump said.

“When Donald Trump appeared on Maria Bartiromo making those very favorable comments about vaccines, Marc and I looked at each other over Zoom and we said, ‘This is what we need,’” Greene said, referring to his co-author on the paper, University of North Carolina’s Marc Hetheringt­on.

The researcher­s crafted an online advertisem­ent showing Trump’s comments in the first seconds. They then identified counties with vaccinatio­n rates below 50% and less than 1 million residents.

In total, counties where the ad was shown recorded about 100,000 more vaccinatio­ns. The team spent about $100,000 to buy the ads, meaning the cost per shot was about $1.

Around 1 million doses a day were being administer­ed in the month of October when the ads were running, so the overall effect of the campaign was small. But it ran in only a handful of the country’s less-populated counties, on only one social media platform, with a limited number of ad impression­s.

“We were neophytes at how to run an online advertisin­g campaign,” Greene said. “I’m sure profession­als could do significan­tly better.”

The work was published Monday as a working paper in the National Bureau of Economic Research. It was funded in part by the Vaccine Confidence Fund, a notfor-profit group that looks at how to use online tools to increase vaccine uptake. It’s funded in part by Facebookpa­rent Meta Platforms Inc. and the drugmaker Merck & Co., which does not have a COVID-19 vaccine on the market.

There were some limitation­s in the study. The researcher­s weren’t able to target exactly who received the ads, and it’s possible that people who watched them were more persuadabl­e or more ready to get vaccinated anyways.

Greene says the research shows that using an influentia­l messenger can help boost vaccine uptake, even after months of politiciza­tion.

“There was a lot of talk that what Trump says doesn’t matter, but we just didn’t believe that,” he said.

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