Publications
Key publications:
Mar-24: The Empathetic Refutational Interview to tackle vaccine misconceptions: four randomised experiments
In this key publication we describe the four steps of the Empathetic Refutational Interview and the research findings that demonstrate the importance of each step.
Jul-23: A Taxonomy of Anti-Vaccination Arguments: Systematic Literature Review and Text Modeling
In this publication we describe the development and validation of a taxonomy for arguments expressed against vaccination, classified according to their underlying psychological attitude roots.
Publications list:
A Randomized Controlled Trial of Empathetic Refutational Learning with Health Care Professionals | Feb-25 | Here we show show that online self-study has only a limited effect on developing healthcare professionals’ skills, underscoring the importance of providing active training in the use of the ERI. |
Association of the Belief in Conspiracy Narratives with Vaccination Status and Recommendation Behaviours of German Physicians | Oct-24 | In this publication we show that vaccination recommendation behaviours in German physicians is associated with their belief in conspiracy narratives. |
Healthcare professionals’ perceptions of challenges in vaccine communication and training needs: A qualitative study | Jul-24 | Here we describe our findings on healthcare professionals’ perceptions of vaccine communication training, the support they receive, and their needs for training. |
Identifying the underlying psychological constructs from self-expressed anti-vaccination argumentation | Jul-24 | In this study we build on the taxonomy of arguments against vaccination and show that the attitude roots can be grouped into related clusters. |
Testing psychological inoculation to reduce reactance to vaccine-related communication | Mar-24 | This publication discusses the difficulty of addressing reactance as an attitude root in mass communication and how message framing may be important. |
Difficulties faced by physicians from four European countries in rebutting anti-vaccination arguments: A cross-sectional study | Mar-24 | Here we describe the difficulties that physicians of different countries face when addressing arguments against vaccination that stem from different psychological attitude roots, and how those arguments that relate to a wider sociopolitical context may be harder to deal with. |
Healthcare professionals’ attitudes to mandatory COVID-19 vaccination: Cross-sectional survey data from four European countries | Sep-23 | In this publication we discuss physicians attitudes to mandatory vaccination and the reasons for these. |
International adaptation and validation of the Pro-VC-Be: measuring the psychosocial determinants of vaccine confidence in healthcare professionals in European countries | Aug-23 | Here we describe the adaptation and validation of the Pro-VC-Be survey tool for an international audience. |
Endorsement of alternative medicine and vaccine hesitancy among physicians: A cross-sectional study in four European countries | Aug-23 | In this publication we show that healthcare professionals’ endorsement of complementary and alternative medicine correlates with reduced recommendation of vaccination. |
Psychological profiles of anti-vaccination argument endorsement | Jul-23 | Here we show how personality traits are linked to the endorsement of arguments against vaccination. |
When Science Becomes Embroiled in Conflict: Recognizing the Public’s Need for Debate while Combating Conspiracies and Misinformation | May-22 | In this review we discuss the need to acknowledge underlying truths whilst addressing misinformation that twists these truths. |
An instrument to measure psychosocial determinants of health care professionals’ vaccination behavior: Validation of the Pro-VC-Be questionnaire | Apr-22 | Here we describe the validation of the Pro-VC-Be survey tool which measures healthcare professionals’ attitudes to and behaviours around vaccination. |
Vaccine hesitancy in health-care providers in Western countries: a narrative review | Mar-22 | In this publication we discuss how healthcare professionals may have the same concerns about vaccinations as their patients. |