As scientists work to create a vaccine against COVID-19, a small but fervent anti-vaccination movement is marshalling against it. Campaigners are seeding outlandish narratives: they falsely say that coronavirus vaccines will be used to implant microchips into people, for instance, and falsely claim that a woman who took part in a UK vaccine trial died. In April, some carried placards with anti-vaccine slogans at rallies in California to protest against the lockdown. Last week, a now-deleted YouTube video promoting wild conspiracy theories about the pandemic and asserting (without evidence) that vaccines would “kill millions” received more than 8 million views.
It’s not known how many people would actually refuse a COVID-19 vaccine—and general support for vaccines remains high. But some researchers studying vaccine-opposition movements say they’re concerned that the messages could undermine efforts to establish herd immunity to the new coronavirus. Online opposition to vaccines has rapidly pivoted to talk of the pandemic, says Neil Johnson, a physicist at George Washington University in Washington DC, who is studying the campaigners’ tactics. “For a lot of these groups, it’s all about COVID now,” he says.
Groups opposing vaccines are small in size, but their online-communications strategy is worryingly effective and far-reaching, a report from Johnson’s team suggests. Before the SARS-CoV-2 virus emerged, Johnson’s team began mapping out a network of views on vaccination, on Facebook. They investigated more than 1,300 pages, followed by about 85 million individuals.
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Their findings, published on 13 May, suggest that anti-vaccination pages are smaller but more numerous than pro-vaccination ones, and are more often linked to in discussions on other Facebook pages—such as parent associations at schools—whose stance on vaccination is undecided.
In contrast, pages that explain the benefits of and the scientific case for vaccination are linked in a network that is largely disconnected from this “main battlefield” for public sentiment, as Johnson puts it. During measles outbreaks in 2019, anti-vaccination pages grew more links than did pro-vaccination ones on Facebook, Johnson’s team adds. An extrapolation of current trends using computer simulations suggests that anti-vaccination views might dominate the network within ten years, they write.
The work shows that “the pro-vaccine community are basically sticking to their narrative and talking to each other, and not reaching out and being responsive to the narratives that are out there among the undecided,” says Heidi Larson, who directs the Vaccine Confidence Project, a group that monitors public trust in vaccines, at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
The issue isn’t confined to Facebook. On 1 April, Johnson’s team released a preprint of a separate study on online messaging about COVID-19. That report, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, suggests that links are growing across different social-media platforms between anti-vaccine groups debating COVID-19 and other interest groups, such as far-right extremists.
Countering the spread of anti-vaccine sentiment will involve understanding not just the shape of the online map, but of how it got that way, says Bruce Gellin, president of global immunization at the Sabin Vaccine Institute in Washington DC. “We need to understand what it is about the conversations and content [around anti-vaccination] that compels people to listen and share it with others,” he says.
Varied, emotive messages
Pro-vaccine groups have a simple message—vaccines work and save lives. Anti-vaccine narratives are numerous: from sowing worries about children’s health to advocating alternative medicines and linking immunizations to conspiracy theories. And the anti-vaccination messages are spread across many more Facebook clusters than are those from the larger pro-vaccine groups. Johnson says these features echo those his team has found in earlier studies of insurgency networks in conflict zones, where insurgents could often embed themselves deeply into existing social networks.
Anti-vaccine campaigners tend to win converts with personalized, emotive messages, says Larson; these are built not necessarily on fear (“Vaccines will kill you.”), but on appeals to the heart (“Do you love your children?”). The public-health community, meanwhile, has simply been trying to get more people vaccinated, she says—which might lead to a feeling that they are just trying to get their numbers up. “The approach needs to be quite different with people who are undecided,” she says. Vaccine-advocacy organizations are “not listening to concerns and questions”.
Overall, most people support vaccines, points out Gellin, and are likely to do so in this pandemic. Still, global vaccination rates have plateaued in the past two decades, Larson says. Both she and Gellin worry that another reason for public suspicion about a COVID-19 vaccine might be the speed of its development. “We should be very clear and transparent about the development process,” says Gellin. “Otherwise, when it shows up, people will ask ‘how can we be sure no shortcuts were taken?’”
The messaging around a vaccine will also need to be carefully thought out. If there’s already fewer COVID-19 infections by then, it’s going to be a hard sell, says Larson. “The thing that’s going to change people’s minds is if the government says that if you have the vaccine, you can go to work”, she says.
This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on May 13 2020.
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