Trait reactance as psychological motivation to reject vaccination: Two longitudinal studies and one experimental study

Author:

Soveri Anna12ORCID,Karlsson Linda C.12,Mäki Karl O.3,Holford Dawn4ORCID,Fasce Angelo5,Schmid Philipp678,Antfolk Jan9,Karlsson Linnea12,Karlsson Hasse1210,Nolvi Saara123,Karukivi Max11,Lindfelt Mikael12,Lewandowsky Stephan41314

Affiliation:

1. FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study, Department of Clinical Medicine University of Turku Turku Finland

2. Centre for Population Health Research University of Turku and Turku University Hospital Turku Finland

3. Department of Psychology and Speech‐Language Pathology University of Turku Turku Finland

4. School of Psychological Science University of Bristol Bristol UK

5. Faculty of Medicine University of Coimbra Coimbra Portugal

6. Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Nijmegen Nijmegen The Netherlands

7. Institute for Planetary Health Behavior Erfurt Germany

8. Health Communication Working Group, Implementation Research, Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine University of Hamburg Hamburg Germany

9. Department of Psychology Åbo Akademi University Turku Finland

10. Department of Psychiatry Turku University Hospital and University of Turku Turku Finland

11. Department of Adolescent Psychiatry University of Turku and Turku University Hospital Turku Finland

12. Department of Theology Åbo Akademi University Turku Finland

13. Department of Psychology University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

14. School of Psychological Science University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractAnti‐science attitudes can be resilient to scientific evidence if they are rooted in psychological motives. One such motive is trait reactance, which refers to the need to react with opposition when one's freedom of choice has been threatened. In three studies, we investigated trait reactance as a psychological motivation to reject vaccination. In the longitudinal studies (n = 199; 293), we examined if trait reactance measured before the COVID‐19 pandemic was related to people's willingness to get vaccinated against COVID‐19 up to 2 years later during the pandemic. In the experimental study (n = 398), we tested whether trait reactance makes anti‐vaccination attitudes more resistant to information and whether this resistance can be mitigated by framing the information to minimize the risk of triggering state reactance. The longitudinal studies showed that higher trait reactance before the COVID‐19 pandemic was related to lower willingness to get vaccinated against COVID‐19. Our experimental study indicated that highly reactant individuals' willingness to vaccinate was unaffected by the amount and framing of the information provided. Trait reactance has a strong and durable impact on vaccination willingness. This highlights the importance of considering the role of trait reactance in people's vaccination‐related decision‐making.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Psychology

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