Vaccine requirements rather than recommendations could be best to get more people jabbed

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A study from the US has found that a requirement to get vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 to be allowed to go to work, school or travel in the USA could be more effective at getting people jabbed than office policies which express a preference for, or emphasize the benefits of, vaccination. The researchers first surveyed a small group to find out whether they would get a vaccine if it was mandated, then followed up with three experiments where a hypothetical situation around vaccination was posed. 86 per cent of the surveyed group said they would be vaccinated if it was required for work, travel or school. And a larger proportion of people from the experiment groups expressed stronger intentions to get vaccinated if it was required, rather than preferred or promoted by their employer.

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From: Springer Nature

COVID-19: Vaccination requirements may promote vaccine uptake in the USA

Making vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 a requirement for work, school or travel in the USA may be more effective at promoting vaccine uptake than employer policies which express a preference for, or emphasize the benefits of, vaccination. The findings are published in Scientific Reports.

Dolores Albarracin and colleagues surveyed 299 adults from across the USA to identify whether they would be vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 if it was required for work, travel or school. They then conducted three experiments in which a total of 1,324 participants were asked whether a hypothetical new or current employer requiring, preferring or emphasizing the benefits of vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 would make them more or less likely to be vaccinated. The authors also used a psychological questionnaire to measure the tendency of participants to react negatively to regulations and asked participants whether hypothetical vaccine requirements affected their perceptions of vaccination.

The authors found that 86% of the 299 people surveyed reported that they would get vaccinated if it was required for work, travel or school. In response to hypothetical workplace vaccination policies, participants reported stronger intentions to be vaccinated in response to vaccination being required, rather than preferred or promoted by the employer. Those who reported they tended to react negatively to regulations were found to be similarly or more positively influenced to be vaccinated as a result of vaccination requirements compared to those who tended to react neutrally or positively to regulations. Among participants who tended to react negatively to regulations, hypothetical vaccination requirements were not found to affect how beneficial they felt vaccination was, but did make them feel less morally obliged to be vaccinated when compared to vaccination being preferred or promoted. This suggests that while vaccination requirements may promote vaccination among those who tended to react negatively to regulations, this is not due to perceptions of vaccine benefits or a moral obligation to get vaccinated.

Journal/
conference:
Scientific Reports
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
Funder: Funding was provided by National Science Foundation (Grant No. NSF 2031972).
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