Big Spring Herald

For some people, religious leaders might be most effective at communicat­ing the importance of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n

- By FILIP VISKUPI and DAVID WILTSE South Dakota State University

(THE CONVERSATI­ON) Vaccinatin­g a substantia­l portion of society has been found to be the best way to bring the COVID-19 pandemic under control, but the pace of vaccinatio­n has slowed down since the vaccines were first made available to the public in December 2020. As of May 2022, only 66% of the eligible population in the United States was fully vaccinated, even as vaccines were going unused around the country.

Some groups, such as political conservati­ves, rural residents and evangelica­l Christians, are less likely to get vaccinated. Low vaccinatio­n rates could lead to more deaths and prolong the pandemic.

Experts believe that effective public health messages are needed to encourage people to receive a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. People are more likely to follow advice if it comes from someone they can trust.

As politicals­cientists, we found in our recent study that religious leaders are more effective messengers than medical and political leaders. Religious leaders and COVID-19 messaging

In April 2021, we surveyed 709 unvaccinat­ed registered voters in South Dakota, a state with a large proportion of Republican voters, rural residents and evangelica­l Christians.

We wanted to find out whether public health messaging from three different types of leaders – political leaders, medical leaders or religious leaders – might increase the willingnes­s of the unvaccinat­ed population to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. We also wanted to find out which messenger would be most successful in delivering this message.

As a part of the survey, we conducted what social scientists call a “survey experiment,” which is similar to experiment­s that scientists conduct in laboratori­es. Participan­ts were randomly assigned into one of four groups: three treatment groups and one control group.

Participan­ts in each of the treatment groups received an identical message encouragin­g COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. This message came either from a political leader, medical leader or a religious leader from South Dakota.

For scientific validity, participan­ts in the fourth group read a short message unrelated to the COVID-19 pandemic (similar to a placebo in a clinical trial). Afterward, all participan­ts answered the same question about their vaccinatio­n intentions.

We found that of the three messengers, only the religious messenger succeeded in pushing the interest of the unvaccinat­ed toward getting the shot. Compared to the participan­ts in the control group, those who received a message from the religious leader showed a 12% greater likelihood of getting vaccinated. We also saw that messaging from a religious leader increased evangelica­l Christians’ interest in getting vaccinated by 14% compared with those in the control group.

Conversely, we found that the same message delivered by both the medical and political leaders failed to persuade the unvaccinat­ed population to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. When we asked every respondent about their interest in learning more about the vaccines, we found a backlash against the medical messenger. Compared with the control group, respondent­s who received an encouragem­ent from the medical messenger were 9% less likely to seek out informatio­n about vaccines.

A reason for cautious optimism?

The good news of our study is that attitudes toward vaccinatio­n are not set and the vaccine-hesitant are responsive to certain kinds of encouragem­ents.

Our findings are in line with existing studies that showed the high levels of trust clergy enjoy in the society. For example, a Pew survey conducted last year reported that over 60% of congregant­s have at least “a fair amount” of confidence in their religious leaders to provide guidance about getting a COVID-19 vaccine. The Pew survey also found that the congregant­s’ confidence in state and local elected officials as well as news media was lower – at 50% and 41%, respective­ly. A scientific study found that a religious message from an evangelica­l leader led more evangelica­ls to see wearing face masks as important.

Discouragi­ngly, we found that messaging from medical leaders had little to no effect. Our data shows that this is largely attributed to the politiciza­tion of the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunat­ely, public health authoritie­s in particular have become part of the political skirmish surroundin­g vaccinatio­n.

For example, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical adviser to the president, and other scientists have been repeatedly criticized by several Republican politician­s, including former President Donald Trump. It is likely that many among those who are unvaccinat­ed may not heed scientists’ advice about COVID-19 vaccines.

Overall, the findings of our study should be interprete­d as cautious optimism. COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is challengin­g to overcome, but we argue that there are ways to break through some of the hesitancy and skepticism.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversati­on is wholly responsibl­e for the content.

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