Toronto Star

What defenders of science can learn from ‘anti-vaxxers’

- SAMIR GUPTA

Disneyland is the epicentre of a measles epidemic that has spread to 14 states and will likely get worse before it gets better. In Quebec, an outbreak affected almost 800 people in 2011, and in B.C., 400 were infected last year. As we wait to hear more about Toronto’s six recently confirmed measles cases, we can only hope to avert a similar fate.

Yet measles is one of those diseases we are supposed to have “defeated.” Western countries saw measles infections and deaths drop by over 99 per cent after implementa­tion of the MMR vaccine in the 1960s, and locally acquired measles cases have not been seen in the Americas in over a decade. So how did we get here? What we know is that our vaccinatio­n rates have slowly but steadily dropped over the last decade, and certain regions with particular­ly low rates have emerged.

Those of us who take a science-based approach to vaccinatio­n use the pejorative term “anti-vaxxers” to refer to those who oppose it, and whom we hold responsibl­e for this public health crisis. The anti-vax campaign is based on several “philosophi­cal” objections, most prominentl­y, a belief that vaccines are responsibl­e for autism (which has been invalidate­d by science).

So far, public health officials, scientists and doctors like myself have countered anti-vaxxers by doing what comes naturally to us: trying to explain the science to the public. To those of us who espouse empiricism, the scientific case for vaccines is overwhelmi­ngly compelling. The problem is that science is hard to communicat­e, and not everyone buys it.

The idea that vaccines cause autism has become entrenched because of two unavoidabl­e human psychologi­cal tendencies. The first is our innate need to assign blame when things go wrong (like when our child becomes sick) and the second is what scientists call the post hoc fallacy — which is when we reach the irresistib­le conclusion that since event Y followed event X, event Y must have been caused by event X.

The result has been a series of parents of children with autism coming out with harrowing stories of their healthy children suddenly becoming autistic after vaccinatio­n and progressiv­ely worsening with each additional vaccine. And as much as I hate to admit this as a scientist and a physician, stories move us a lot more than science does.

It’s time for the pro-vaccine movement to take a page out of the anti-vax playbook. We need our own powerful narratives that conjure fear

In my own practice, if my patient suffers a complicati­on from a procedure that I ordered, I would be lying if I said that it didn’t affect my decision to order the same procedure in the next patient, no matter how convinced I was of the rarity of the complicati­on and the proven scientific benefit of the procedure. So when an eloquent orator with an unshakable belief (read Jenny McCarthy) delivers a compelling story, the resulting fear contribute­s enormously to parental vaccine hesitancy.

So what’s the solution? First, we need to practice what we preach, and use science. Studies show that didactic repetition of facts just doesn’t change behaviour, and that our top-down and adversaria­l ap- proach further polarizes communitie­s and actually alienates parents. Efforts to identify factors that predict vaccine hesitancy have found that local social norms and interactio­ns between patients and their providers are most important. Accordingl­y, interventi­ons such as community engagement through local opinion leaders and peer groups, and education and training to improve health-care providers’ communicat­ion approach have successful­ly boosted local vaccinatio­n rates in some studies.

But it’s also time for the pro-vaccine movement to take a page out of the antivax playbook. That means we need our own powerful narratives that conjure fear.

For the longest time, they simply didn’t exist. Who can tell the powerful story of how their vaccinated child didn’t get measles and didn’t become quadripleg­ic as a result? But as the anti-vaxxers have gained ground, and epidemics have resulted, we now need people to hear the heart-wrenching tales of parents of children who did get measles.

People also need to hear from the parents of autistic children who developed autism despite never receiving a single vaccine. And maybe it wouldn’t be such a bad thing if a B-list celebrity (and maybe even a former Playmate) took up our cause. If history is any guide, millions of lives may depend on it.

Dr. Samir Gupta is a respirolog­ist and scientist at the University of Toronto, and medical contributo­r for the Global Evening News in Toronto. His views are his own. @SammyG_MD

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Actor Jim Carrey kisses Jenny McCarthy during a 2008 rally in Washington, D.C. calling for the end of toxins from vaccines.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Actor Jim Carrey kisses Jenny McCarthy during a 2008 rally in Washington, D.C. calling for the end of toxins from vaccines.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada