Combating Online Misinformation Regarding Vaccinations

Leonie Westerbeek, H. Hendriks, E. Smit, Corine S. Meppelink
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Abstract

An increasing number of parents refrain from vaccinating their children. This causes lower immunisation coverage, resulting in disease outbreaks. Online misinformation about early-childhood vaccination is a potential cause of this problem. This study tests whether a warning tool, with the appearance of a traffic light, can influence parents’ information choices. An online experiment was conducted with parents and expecting parents (N = 179) with varying pre-existing attitudes and in different decision stages. Participants were asked to select three vaccine-related web links on a Google search result page either with or without the warning tool present. Results showed that participants in the warning tool condition (i.e., who saw reliability labels) selected a higher number of links marked as reliable compared to participants in the control group. No significant moderating effect of decision stage and pre-existing attitude were found. As our findings suggest that a warning tool can lead to better-informed vaccination decisions, the implementation of such a warning tool may prove worthwhile.
打击网上关于疫苗接种的错误信息
越来越多的父母不给孩子接种疫苗。这导致免疫覆盖率降低,从而导致疾病暴发。网上关于儿童早期接种疫苗的错误信息是造成这一问题的一个潜在原因。这项研究测试了一个带有交通灯外观的警告工具是否会影响父母的信息选择。对179名父母和准父母进行了一项在线实验,这些父母在不同的预先存在态度和不同的决策阶段。参与者被要求在谷歌搜索结果页面上选择三个与疫苗相关的网络链接,无论是否存在警告工具。结果表明,与对照组的参与者相比,警告工具条件下的参与者(即看到可靠性标签的参与者)选择了更多标记为可靠的链接。决策阶段和既存态度对心理健康的调节作用不显著。由于我们的研究结果表明,警告工具可以导致更明智的疫苗接种决策,因此实施这种警告工具可能是值得的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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