Skip to main content

Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Moffitt, TE; Caspi, A; Ambler, A; Bourassa, K; Harrington, H; Hogan, S; Houts, R; Ramrakha, S; Wood, SL; Poulton, R
Published in: PNAS nexus
May 2022

To design effective pro-vaccination messaging, it is important to know "where people are coming from"-the personal experiences and long-standing values, motives, lifestyles, preferences, emotional tendencies, and information-processing capacities of people who end up resistant or hesitant toward vaccination. We used prospective data from a 5-decade cohort study spanning childhood to midlife to construct comprehensive early-life psychological histories of groups who differed in their vaccine intentions in months just before COVID vaccines became available in their country. Vaccine-resistant and vaccine-hesitant participants had histories of adverse childhood experiences that foster mistrust, longstanding mental-health problems that foster misinterpretation of messaging, and early-emerging personality traits including tendencies toward extreme negative emotions, shutting down mentally under stress, nonconformism, and fatalism about health. Many vaccine-resistant and -hesitant participants had cognitive difficulties in comprehending health information. Findings held after control for socioeconomic origins. Vaccine intentions are not short-term isolated misunderstandings. They are part of a person's style of interpreting information and making decisions that is laid down before secondary school age. Findings suggest ways to tailor vaccine messaging for hesitant and resistant groups. To prepare for future pandemics, education about viruses and vaccines before or during secondary schooling could reduce citizens' level of uncertainty during a pandemic, and provide people with pre-existing knowledge frameworks that prevent extreme emotional distress reactions and enhance receptivity to health messages. Enhanced medical technology and economic resilience are important for pandemic preparedness, but a prepared public who understands the need to mask, social distance, and vaccinate will also be important.

Duke Scholars

Altmetric Attention Stats
Dimensions Citation Stats

Published In

PNAS nexus

DOI

EISSN

2752-6542

ISSN

2752-6542

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

1

Issue

2

Start / End Page

pgac034
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Moffitt, T. E., Caspi, A., Ambler, A., Bourassa, K., Harrington, H., Hogan, S., … Poulton, R. (2022). Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance. PNAS Nexus, 1(2), pgac034. https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac034
Moffitt, Terrie E., Avshalom Caspi, Antony Ambler, Kyle Bourassa, HonaLee Harrington, Sean Hogan, Renate Houts, Sandhya Ramrakha, Stacy L. Wood, and Richie Poulton. “Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance.PNAS Nexus 1, no. 2 (May 2022): pgac034. https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac034.
Moffitt TE, Caspi A, Ambler A, Bourassa K, Harrington H, Hogan S, et al. Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance. PNAS nexus. 2022 May;1(2):pgac034.
Moffitt, Terrie E., et al. “Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance.PNAS Nexus, vol. 1, no. 2, May 2022, p. pgac034. Epmc, doi:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac034.
Moffitt TE, Caspi A, Ambler A, Bourassa K, Harrington H, Hogan S, Houts R, Ramrakha S, Wood SL, Poulton R. Deep-seated psychological histories of COVID-19 vaccine hesitance and resistance. PNAS nexus. 2022 May;1(2):pgac034.

Published In

PNAS nexus

DOI

EISSN

2752-6542

ISSN

2752-6542

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

1

Issue

2

Start / End Page

pgac034