University of Southern California: Traditional incentives don’t offset COVID vaccine hesitancy
Neither money nor other nudges are enough to persuade vaccine-hesitant people to get the COVID-19 vaccine, a new USC study shows.
The findings, published recently in the journal Vaccine, suggest the standard public health playbook may be ineffective, and mitigating future pandemics may require stronger policy levers such as employer rules or government mandates.
“There is literature and evidence from other vaccination campaigns like the flu, and even some childhood vaccinations, showing that financial incentives do move the needle. We were expecting similar results,” said Mireille Jacobson, an economist and associate professor at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, co-director of the Aging and Cognition Program at the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics and the study’s first co-author. “Apparently, people have much stronger beliefs and objections about COVID-19 vaccination.”
COVID vaccine hesitancy: Vaccinations stalled after 2021 rollout
Despite rapid initial uptake, COVID-19 vaccinations in the United States stalled within a few months of widespread rollout in 2021. In response, many state and local governments, employers and health systems used public health messaging, financial incentives and creative scheduling tools to increase vaccine uptake.
In mid-2021, months after vaccines were widely available and COVID deaths continued to mount, researchers evaluated vaccination “intentions” – stated plans to get vaccinated — versus actual vaccine uptake. They recruited 2,701 unvaccinated members of a Medicaid managed care plan in California to fill out a survey and randomly assigned them to one or more of the following conditions – a video message to encourage vaccination; $10 or $50 financial incentives for vaccination; or access to a simple vaccination appointment scheduler.
The average age of survey respondents was 36.4 years; 74% were female, 36% self-identified as white, 31% as Black and 34% as Latino. About two-third of respondents received care through Contra Costa Regional Medical Center. The median self-reported household income was between $20,000 to $29,999 and 8% of respondents had less than a high school degree. As for political leanings, 55% supported Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election and 15% supported Donald Trump.
Interventions’ impact on COVID vaccine hesitancy
The respondents were spread evenly across the study’s different groups. The primary goal was to see whether participants received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine within 30 days of recruitment.
The result: Public health messaging increased the number of people who said they would seek vaccination — but none of the interventions increased vaccination rates.
What’s more, vaccination rates declined by about 4 percentage points when money was offered among two groups: those 40 and over and those who supported Trump in the 2020 presidential election. These groups had the lowest rate of vaccination intentions in the sample.
“The main lesson I took away from this is that, in our increasingly tribal and politically polarized environment, some people have become so entrenched in their beliefs that a nudge is just not enough to get them to act on simple, widely accepted medical advice,” said co-first author Tom Chang, an associate professor of finance and business economics at the USC Marshall School of Business. “In some cases, the narrative seems to be more important than life and death.”
Other highlights from the study include:
More than 30% of vaccine eligible subjects remained unvaccinated despite living in county with highest state vaccination rate.
1% of participants expressed intentions to get vaccination within 30 days.
Vaccination intentions increased by 8.6% in response to a health consequences video.
A 10% increase in vaccination intentions was associated with only a 1.5% increase in actual vaccinations.