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Trust in Government

In many countries, hesitancy around COVID-19 vaccines became a significant public health challenge during the pandemic. A British study from 2022 explores the demographics of vaccine decliners: Who decided against the vaccine? And what were the reasons for their vaccine hesitancy?

Vocabulary

You will find all these words in the text.

Individual work: Go through the words and find out what they mean.

In pairs: Pick a random word from the list and explain it to your partner. While explaining, you are not allowed to use the specific word and you are not allowed to speak Norwegian. Your partner tries to guess what word you are explaining.

  • eligible

  • hesitant

  • longitudinal study

  • counter-intuitive

  • correlate

  • deep-seated

  • disenfranchised

  • participant

  • influential factor

  • on average

  • marital status

  • clinical vulnerability

  • silver bullet

  • transparency

  • economic disparity

  • resilient

The world has recently been through a pandemic that has caused the deaths of millions of people. Vaccines have proven to be effective against severe disease, hospitalisation, and death. Nevertheless, a significant number of people have declined the vaccine. There are many reasons for this: Some people have not considered the disease itself to be a serious risk to their health. Others have doubted the vaccines' efficacy and safety. Others again have expressed low confidence in the government and the policy makers deciding on the rollout of the vaccines. It also turns out – as the following research article will show – that vaccine hesitancy is not evenly spread across the population, with some ethnic groups being over-represented. How can this be explained?

Research: Lack of trust in public figures linked to COVID vaccine hesitancy.

An estimated 132 million COVID vaccines were given to people in Britain in 2021. Yet despite this, over a year into the UK’s vaccination programme, a significant number of people still don’t have any vaccine-based protection against the coronavirus. Around one in ten eligible people in the UK still haven’t had a first COVID vaccine dose.

Who makes up this hesitant group, and what are their reasons for not taking a COVID vaccine? These are questions that our research sought to answer by analysing data from an ongoing survey called the UK Household Longitudinal Study. We found that during the period immediately before Britain’s COVID vaccine rollout began, over 11% of UK adults said they were unwilling to take a COVID vaccine. But this hesitancy wasn’t spread evenly across the population.

It was lowest among white people, with 9% saying they didn’t want a COVID vaccine. In comparison, 50% of Black people said they didn’t want one, and hesitancy was also high in other non-white groups: 28% of South Asian and 17% of other Asian respondents said they were unwilling to be vaccinated. Among people of mixed ethnicity, the hesitancy rate was 22%.

Rates of declared vaccine hesitancy have since fallen, but the general trends we found have been borne out over the past year. Across every age group, COVID vaccine uptake has been highest among white people and lowest among Black people, with the difference often a sizable gap of around 20 percentage points. Among those eligible, the uptake of booster doses has also been lower among non-white groups.

This appears counter-intuitive. Research has shown that Black and minority ethnic people face a higher risk from COVID. We might have expected this increased risk to correlate with a higher demand for vaccination in these groups. Instead, there’s greater hesitancy. So what might be driving this?

A deep-seated problem

We believe this hesitancy is at least partly driven by people feeling disenfranchised by the state or not trusting government personnel.

When we analysed data from the UK Household Longitudinal Study, we found that participants who agreed or strongly agreed with the statement that “public officials don’t care”, or who felt that they “don’t have a say in what government does”, were least likely to want to get vaccinated.

Note that the responses to these statements came from an earlier round of questioning in the household study – one that pre-dated the pandemic. Participants’ answers weren’t influenced by how the government had been managing the pandemic. Rather, they can be interpreted as a reflection of people’s overall faith in public institutions, irrespective of COVID.

This appears to be a highly influential factor when it comes to hesitancy. Those who felt they have no say in government were almost twice as likely to be hesitant to a COVID vaccine compared to those who felt otherwise. Similarly, we saw higher vaccine hesitancy in those who don’t trust public officials.

This may explain why ethnic minorities are so hesitant and their vaccine uptake has been lower. In the household study, ethnic minority groups reported, on average, less faith in public officials and were less likely to report that they feel they have a say in government.

Indeed, once we statistically controlled for this “trust” variable, we found that people at higher risk from COVID – including those from ethnic minority backgrounds – were more willing to take a COVID vaccine. For example, South Asian people who felt positively towards public officials were 4.5 times as willing to get vaccinated compared to those from other ethnic groups who had a neutral or negative attitude towards public officials.

What about other influences?

After controlling for many other factors (such as age, gender, marital status, ethnicity, educational qualifications, employment status, household living arrangements, clinical vulnerability, subjective financial condition and geographical region), we found that a number of other things were associated with vaccine willingness, too.

People with lower levels of education were more likely to be unwilling to take a vaccine when other factors were controlled for. Conversely, clinically vulnerable respondents were more willing to take a COVID jab. Self-employed people were less willing to get vaccinated compared to employed people. And respondents who said they felt positive about their financial well-being were almost three times as likely to be willing to take a vaccine compared to those felt they were just getting by or struggling.

How to raise trust

Given these overall findings, building trust in the public sector and government could be a way of improving uptake, particularly in groups who are most at risk from COVID. But when it comes to building trust, there’s no silver bullet. It takes time and effort.

Tactics to try could include engaging citizens in consultations and focus groups concerning the topic in question – in this case vaccination – as well as frequent and transparent communication. It’s also important for the scientific community, public figures and public institutions to maintain high ethical standards during times of emergency like the pandemic when there is reduced oversight.

Unfortunately for the UK, reports of corruption in the awarding of PPE* contracts, and now the scandal of the Downing Street lockdown parties, will have lowered public trust in officials. Growing inequality is another barrier to trust, with those left behind increasingly believing that institutions are rigged against them.

Thus, open dialogue and transparency will only go so far. Such efforts should be accompanied by policies and actions that seek to address wider issues such as economic disparity and unfairness. Doing this might not only make managing future public health emergencies easier by helping to raise vaccine uptake, but could also help create a society that is less polarised and more resilient.

* PPE = Personal Protective Equipment. In this context, it refers to equipment used by health workers to protect themselves against Covid (masks, glows, gowns, eye shields).

This article was originally published in The Conversation (https://theconversation.com/uk) by Kausik Chaudhuri, Anindita Chakrabarti, Joht Singh Chandan, and Siddhartha Bandyopadhyay from the Universities of Leeds and Birmingham.

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