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Opposition to voluntary and mandated COVID-19 vaccination as a dynamic process: Evidence and policy implications of changing beliefs

Katrin Schmelz, Samuel Bowles

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

SignificanceThe challenge of securing adherence to public health policies is compounded when an emerging threat and a set of unprecedented remedies are not fully understood among the general public. The evolution of citizens' attitudes toward vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic offers psychologically and sociologically grounded insights that enrich the conventional incentives- and constraints-based approach to policy design. We thus contribute to a behavioral science of policy compliance during public health emergencies of the kind that we may increasingly face in the future. From early in the pandemic, we have tracked the same individuals, providing a lens into the conditions under which people's attitudes toward voluntary and mandated vaccinations change, providing essential information for COVID-19 policy not available from cross-section data.

Topics & Concepts

IncentivePandemicOpposition (politics)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Public relationsPublic policyPublic healthHealth policyVaccination policyPolitical scienceVaccinationMedicineEconomicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawVirologyPoliticsMicroeconomicsPathologyNursingDiseaseCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesVaccine Coverage and HesitancyExperimental Behavioral Economics Studies
Opposition to voluntary and mandated COVID-19 vaccination as a dynamic process: Evidence and policy implications of changing beliefs | Litcius