疫苗与刻薄:对宗教少数群体中疫苗犹豫、决策和干预主义的人类学评论。

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-13 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2020.1825618
Ben Kasstan
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引用次数: 30

摘要

本评论涉及高收入国家宗教少数群体对疫苗的犹豫和决策问题。最近的麻疹暴发归因于宗教少数群体的疫苗接种覆盖率较低,这激发了一系列司法管辖区有针对性和大规模的公共卫生干预措施和立法。这篇评论以自我保护的种族和宗教少数群体为例,特别是英国的Haredi或“极端正统派”犹太人,以解决两个关键目标。首先,这篇评论指出,通过更好地理解疫苗决策和接受的内在过程,可以避免宗教少数群体在最近麻疹疫情中的破坏性陈述,这反过来又有助于可持续和可信地解决犹豫问题。第二,该评论主张解决疫苗犹豫问题,作为更广泛地重新设想与少数群体的公共卫生关系的一部分。本评论呼吁公共卫生服务部门提高对儿童疫苗接种的信心,而不是诉诸强制性(和强制性)疫苗接种政策,以解决疫苗接种覆盖率较低的问题。该评论指出,在2020年冠状病毒大流行(COVID-19)将出现的新形式的公共卫生准备中,小心处理与少数群体的关系是多么重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vaccines and vitriol: an anthropological commentary on vaccine hesitancy, decision-making and interventionism among religious minorities.

This commentary addresses the issue of vaccine hesitancy and decision-making among religious minority groups in high-income country settings. Recent measles outbreaks have been attributed to lower-level vaccination coverage among religious minorities, which has inspired targeted as well as wholesale public health interventions and legislation in a range of jurisdictions. The commentary takes the case of self-protective ethnic and religious minority groups, especially Haredi or 'ultra-Orthodox' Jews in the United Kingdom, to address two key aims. First, this commentary flags how damaging representations of religious minorities in recent measles outbreaks can be avoided by better understanding inner processes of vaccine decision-making and acceptance, which can, in turn, help to address hesitancy sustainably and trustfully. Second, the commentary advocates for addressing vaccine hesitancy as part of a broader re-visioning of public health relations with minority groups. This commentary calls on public health services to improve confidence in childhood vaccinations rather than resorting to compulsory (and coercive) vaccination policies in order to address lower-level vaccination coverage. The commentary signposts how essential it is to carefully navigate relationships with minority groups amidst the new forms of public health preparedness that will emerge from the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19).

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CiteScore
2.90
自引率
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