When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia
Introduction Vaccine safety is a primary concern among vaccine-hesitant individuals. We examined how seven persuasive messages with different frames, all focusing on vaccine safety, influenced Malaysians to accept the COVID-19 vaccine, and recommend it to individuals with different health and age pr...
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my.um.eprints.416562023-11-27T01:26:04Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/41656/ When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang Woon, Yuan Liang Lee, Yew Kong Kim, Hyung Joon Lothfi, Nurhyikmah M. Wong, Elizabeth Perialathan, Komathi Ahmad Sanusi, Nor Haryati Isa, Affendi Leong, Chin Tho Costa-Font, Joan RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine Introduction Vaccine safety is a primary concern among vaccine-hesitant individuals. We examined how seven persuasive messages with different frames, all focusing on vaccine safety, influenced Malaysians to accept the COVID-19 vaccine, and recommend it to individuals with different health and age profiles; that is, healthy adults, the elderly, and people with pre-existing health conditions. Methods A randomised controlled experiment was conducted from 29 April to 7 June 2021, which coincided with the early phases of the national vaccination programme when vaccine uptake data were largely unavailable. 5784 Malaysians were randomly allocated into 14 experimental arms and exposed to one or two messages that promoted COVID-19 vaccination. Interventional messages were applied alone or in combination and compared against a control message. Outcome measures were assessed as intent to both take the vaccine and recommend it to healthy adults, the elderly, and people with pre-existing health conditions, before and after message exposure. Changes in intent were modelled and we estimated the average marginal effects based on changes in the predicted probability of responding with a positive intent for each of the four outcomes. Results We found that persuasive communication via several of the experimented messages improved recommendation intentions to people with pre-existing health conditions, with improvements ranging from 4 to 8 percentage points. In contrast, none of the messages neither significantly improved vaccination intentions, nor recommendations to healthy adults and the elderly. Instead, we found evidence suggestive of backfiring among certain outcomes with messages using negative attribute frames, risky choice frames, and priming descriptive norms. Conclusion Message frames that briefly communicate verbatim facts and stimulate rational thinking regarding vaccine safety may be ineffective at positively influencing vaccine-hesitant individuals. Messages intended to promote recommendations of novel health interventions to people with pre-existing health conditions should incorporate safety dimensions. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-07 Article PeerReviewed Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang and Woon, Yuan Liang and Lee, Yew Kong and Kim, Hyung Joon and Lothfi, Nurhyikmah M. and Wong, Elizabeth and Perialathan, Komathi and Ahmad Sanusi, Nor Haryati and Isa, Affendi and Leong, Chin Tho and Costa-Font, Joan (2022) When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia. BMJ Global Health, 7 (7). ISSN 2059-7908, DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009250 <https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009250>. 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009250 |
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RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang Woon, Yuan Liang Lee, Yew Kong Kim, Hyung Joon Lothfi, Nurhyikmah M. Wong, Elizabeth Perialathan, Komathi Ahmad Sanusi, Nor Haryati Isa, Affendi Leong, Chin Tho Costa-Font, Joan When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
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Introduction Vaccine safety is a primary concern among vaccine-hesitant individuals. We examined how seven persuasive messages with different frames, all focusing on vaccine safety, influenced Malaysians to accept the COVID-19 vaccine, and recommend it to individuals with different health and age profiles; that is, healthy adults, the elderly, and people with pre-existing health conditions. Methods A randomised controlled experiment was conducted from 29 April to 7 June 2021, which coincided with the early phases of the national vaccination programme when vaccine uptake data were largely unavailable. 5784 Malaysians were randomly allocated into 14 experimental arms and exposed to one or two messages that promoted COVID-19 vaccination. Interventional messages were applied alone or in combination and compared against a control message. Outcome measures were assessed as intent to both take the vaccine and recommend it to healthy adults, the elderly, and people with pre-existing health conditions, before and after message exposure. Changes in intent were modelled and we estimated the average marginal effects based on changes in the predicted probability of responding with a positive intent for each of the four outcomes. Results We found that persuasive communication via several of the experimented messages improved recommendation intentions to people with pre-existing health conditions, with improvements ranging from 4 to 8 percentage points. In contrast, none of the messages neither significantly improved vaccination intentions, nor recommendations to healthy adults and the elderly. Instead, we found evidence suggestive of backfiring among certain outcomes with messages using negative attribute frames, risky choice frames, and priming descriptive norms. Conclusion Message frames that briefly communicate verbatim facts and stimulate rational thinking regarding vaccine safety may be ineffective at positively influencing vaccine-hesitant individuals. Messages intended to promote recommendations of novel health interventions to people with pre-existing health conditions should incorporate safety dimensions. |
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Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang Woon, Yuan Liang Lee, Yew Kong Kim, Hyung Joon Lothfi, Nurhyikmah M. Wong, Elizabeth Perialathan, Komathi Ahmad Sanusi, Nor Haryati Isa, Affendi Leong, Chin Tho Costa-Font, Joan |
author_facet |
Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang Woon, Yuan Liang Lee, Yew Kong Kim, Hyung Joon Lothfi, Nurhyikmah M. Wong, Elizabeth Perialathan, Komathi Ahmad Sanusi, Nor Haryati Isa, Affendi Leong, Chin Tho Costa-Font, Joan |
author_sort |
Hing, Nicholas Yee Liang |
title |
When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
title_short |
When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
title_full |
When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
title_fullStr |
When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
title_full_unstemmed |
When do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? Behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in Malaysia |
title_sort |
when do persuasive messages on vaccine safety steer covid-19 vaccine acceptance and recommendations? behavioural insights from a randomised controlled experiment in malaysia |
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BMJ Publishing Group |
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2022 |
url |
http://eprints.um.edu.my/41656/ |
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1783876731457765376 |