Gulf Today

Anti-vaxxers: The government should bear some responsibi­lity for the lack of confidence in a vaccine

- Ian Hamilton,

While some misinforma­tion about the new Covid-19 vaccines is dangerous, the response of some to anti-vaxxers is equally dangerous. Calling people stupid or conspiracy theorists will do litle to persuade them to change their view and risks placing individual­s with a diverse range of views into one amorphous group.

The fallacy is to believe that any of us employ logic when making decisions. This breeds frustratio­n as those trying to persuade can’t understand why given the “facts” those who think differentl­y won’t see “sense”. A litle personal reflection reveals some illogical decisions we all make. Some commercial enterprise­s profit from this, think gym membership, when we sign up we are full of good intentions but can barely remember where the gym is six months later.

We must engage rather than ignore those with concerns about vaccines. If the vaccinatio­n programme is to be successful, then approximat­ely three quarters of the population will need to be vaccinated. If recent polling is accurate then we will need one in four who report being reluctant about vaccinatio­n to be converted.

The saying “that no-one wins an argument” applies to looking at some of the exchanges between the pro and anti-vaccine camps on social media. Accepting that the concerns are as varied as those holding them is a good place to start considerin­g how hearts and minds can be won. These can be broken down into three broad categories, misinforma­tion, conspiracy and concerns about safety.

It is unlikely that those holding fixed views of conspiracy theories, including the idea that Bill Gates plans to include a microchip in a vaccine, will be persuadabl­e. But others are likely to be more malleable as long as we genuinely listen.

Those anxious about the safety and efficacy of the vaccine are not uneducated or drawn exclusivel­y from one particular political or social group. Take a recent UK poll of doctors that found four in 10 would be reluctant to be vaccinated, reasons varied but more than half cited safety concerns. Given that health care workers like doctors are among those to be first in line to be vaccinated then we need them on board. In some ways, we shouldn’t be surprised that such a high proportion of healthcare workers are vaccine sceptics. Ater all, they don’t routinely see people who are well, they are exposed to those who react badly to vaccines, sometimes fatally as a result of anaphylact­ic shock.

This bias exposure naturally breeds a skewed perspectiv­e which in any other walk of life would be viewed as a healthy tendency to question convention­al facts. This hasn’t been helped by vaccine producers limiting access to trial data, providing this could reassure some doctors and health workers. No vaccine is 100 per cent effective or safe, but a focus on problems rather than potential could be fuelling some of the hesitancy.

Irrespecti­ve of background, most individual­s will be more open to an alternativ­e view if they are discussing this issue out of public gaze and one to one rather than in a group. Changing your position on an issue like this isn’t just about logic but feelings and thoughts, shame is a powerful barrier to accepting an alternativ­e view. Minimising this negative feeling is critical.

Employing that old cliché of “it’s not what you say, but the way you say it” offers some help. Rather than geting into a virtual shouting match where facts are exchanged, we know that people respond more favourably to storytelli­ng. Professor Jonathan Van Tam, the deputy chief medical officer, has been the master of the metaphor when making the case for the vaccine. He uses another clever linguistic technique when he talks about how each person vaccinated contribute­s to community immunity. This is more persuasive and acceptable than suggesting individual­s contribute to herd immunity, the inference of behaving like sheep isn’t appealing.

The government is thinking of employing influencer sin an effort to persuade people to get vaccinated, these endorsemen­ts will probably persuade some, but we need micro-influencer­s too. Those people who we are in contact with through work or leisure that we view as credible and trustworth­y.

It is good to see the government consider more imaginativ­e ways of communicat­ing facts about vaccines, having a variety of approaches particular­ly if intelligen­ce is used to match them to specific demographi­c groups will improve uptake.

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