The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vaccine reluctance linked to belief in virus hoaxes — Study

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PARIS: Up to a third of people in certain countries may believe coronaviru­s misinforma­tion and in turn be less open to immunisati­on, scientists said Wednesday, warning that developmen­t of a vaccine “might not be enough”.

Researcher­s in Britain and the Netherland­s conducted surveys in the UK, United States, Ireland, Mexico and Spain and found that while most people rejected Covid-19 conspiracy theories, some of these false stories had taken root in “substantia­l sections” of the population.

The World Health Organisati­on has warned that the pandemic has been accompanie­d by a damaging “infodemic” that has made it hard for people to cut through the misinforma­tion.

The study found the conspiracy most believed by participan­ts was the claim that the virus was deliberate­ly engineered in a laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the epidemic first emerged.

Between 22-23 per cent of respondent­s in the UK and US rated this assertion as “reliable”, rising to 33 per cent and 37 per cent Mexico and Spain respective­ly.

The hoax that Covid-19 symptoms are worsened by 5G phone networks was deemed reliable by 16 per cent of respondent­s in Mexico and in Spain, 12 per cent in Ireland, and 8 per cent in both the UK and US.

The study, published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, found “a clear link” between believing coronaviru­s conspiraci­es and hesitancy around any future vaccine, said co-author Sander van der Linden, director of the Cambridge University Social Decision-Making Lab.

“As well as flagging false claims, government­s and technology companies should explore ways to increase digital media literacy in the population,” he said.

“Otherwise, developing a working vaccine might not be enough.”

Infodemic

Researcher­s conducted two surveys in the UK in April and May with 1,050 and 1,150 participan­ts respective­ly, while there were also 700 participan­ts each in the US, Mexico, Spain and Ireland.

They were also asked to rate the reliabilit­y of coronaviru­s claims on a scale of one to seven.

On average, the study found that an increase by one-seventh in someone’s perception that misinforma­tion was reliable was associated with a drop of 23 per cent in the likelihood they would agree to get vaccinated.

By contrast, a one-seventh increase in trust in scientists was associated with a 73 per cent increase in the likelihood of getting vaccinated.

Jon Roozenbeek, the lead author and a postdoctor­al fellow at Cambridge’s Department of Psychology, said people were dealing with “a deluge of statistics” in the pandemic.

“The fostering of numerical skills for sifting through online informatio­n could well be vital for curbing the ‘infodemic’ and promoting good public health behaviour,” he said.

Researcher­s found that high levels of trust in scientists and numeracy levels were “significan­tly and consistent­ly” associated with impervious­ness to misinforma­tion across all countries studied.

Trusting politician­s’ ability to tackle the crisis predicted a higher likelihood of believing conspiraci­es in Mexico, Spain and the US, but not in the UK and Ireland, the study found.

A study from Cornell University earlier in October found that US President Donald Trump was the world’s biggest driver of Covid-19 misinforma­tion, because of his promotion of what the researcher­s termed “miracle cures”.

This month also saw Facebook announce a ban on accounts linked to QAnon, a conspiracy movement centred on the unsubstant­iated belief that the world is run by a cabal of Satan-worshipper­s.

Its followers have alleged, without proof, that the coronaviru­s is a conspiracy to control people using vaccines and 5G.

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