Here’s How We Should Talk About Vaccines. Hint: No Name-Calling.
Published August 29, 2019 | Opinion
I’m a medical anthropologist, and I have studied1
vaccine selectivity—that is, when parents choose to give their children
only a select subset of required vaccinations, most often skipping
chicken pox and hepatitis B immunizations. I’ve also looked at cases of
complete refusal. If we want to encourage
vaccinations, we must listen
to what selective parents have to say. We must also consider why they
say it.
My findings support the growing body of research2
showing that the more we force people to take sides, the harder it is
to discuss vaccination, let alone to build common cause and work
together for the public good. Authoritarian acts such as just flinging
facts at people or mandating vaccinations can cause vaccine-selective
parents to dig their heels in further. What we need instead is civil
discourse.
My
findings confirm that the more embedded we are within a given community
and the more we identify with that group, the less likely we are to
disagree with their norms. Why? That’s easy: We can’t risk the loss of
friends and relations.
Even
full vaccinators conform for social purposes. In my research, most
parents who gave any reason for choosing to vaccinate beyond “doctor’s
orders” said they were following their parents’ and society’s lead:
“it’s a cultural norm,” one mom told me. Very little vaccine-specific
self-education was undertaken by fully-vaccinating parents, who knew
less about immunization than selective vaccinators (those who choose
some vaccinations but not others). Full vaccinators gave notably fewer
correct answers regarding herd immunity, for instance.
It’s
important to note that a third subset of participants, the total
refusers, knew the least, though there were very few of them. Despite
that fact, in the public’s imagination all who do not fully vaccinate
are stereotyped as extremists and caricatured as tin-foil hat-types.
That’s a big problem. Name-calling is one of the things that got us into
this mess, making vaccination so hard to talk about. Often, it even
pushes people to double down on their skepticism.
Instead,
we should work to create conditions under which people holding
differing positions can talk to each other. This leads to more open,
respectful, bridge-building discussions of vaccination among parents
charged with making immunization decisions. We need this kind of
dialogue if we are to enable a more productive flow of information. As
sociologist Jaron Harambam has noted, a democratic approach to science
is much more likely to result in “truth” than one that relies only on
the institutionally narrowed ideas of “experts.”
This article was reprinted with the author’s permission. It was originally published in the Tampa Bay Times. Elisa (EJ) Sobo is professor and chair of the Department of Anthropology at San Diego State University. Past president of the Society for Medical Anthropology), she has published numerous peer-reviewed journal articles and books, including a forthcoming second edition of “Dynamics of Human Biocultural Diversity: A Unified Approach” (2019).
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