Original article
Cognitive processes and the decisions of some parents to forego pertussis vaccination for their children

https://doi.org/10.1016/0895-4356(96)00007-8Get rights and content
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Abstract

Public health analyses suggest that, in spite of the possibility that pertussis vaccine may cause rare cases of neurological injury, catastrophic risks to individual children are lower if they are vaccinated. A number of parents, however, choose not to vaccinate their children. The purpose of this study was to investigate the decision processes of some parents who choose to vaccinate and some parents who choose not to do so.

Surveys were mailed to 500 randomly selected subscribers of Mothering magazine. Two hundred and ninety-four completed questionnaires were returned (59%). In addition to well-recognized factors in vaccination decisions, perceived dangers of the vaccine, and of the disease and susceptibility to the disease, several cognitive processes not previously considered in vaccination decision studies were found to be important predictors in this population of parents: perceived ability to control children's susceptibility to the disease and the outcome of the disease; ambiguity or doubts about the reliability of vaccine information; a preference for errors of omission over errors of commission; and recognition that if many other children are vaccinated, the risk to unvaccinated children may be lowered.

Although perhaps most cases of undervaccination for pertussis reflect more general problems of health care access, some parents choose to forego vaccination for their children for other reasons. Traditional risk-benefit arguments alone will be unlikely to persuade these parents to reassess their decisions. Efforts to increase childhood vaccination must incorporate an understanding of the cognitive processes that help drive these decisions.

Keywords

Behavioral sciences
decision making
decision theory
DPT
ethics
health policy
judgment
parents
pertussis vaccine
probability
psychology
public health
risk
vaccination
whooping cough

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Supported by Grant No. SES 88-09299 from the National Science Foundation. Dr. Asch is the recipient of a health services research career development award from the Department of Veterans Affairs.