Adam Grant Thinks Again

The Three Deadly Sins of Vaccine Communication

Adam Grant

Aug 6, 2021
8

Over the past 18 months, scientists have made remarkable progress in developing COVID vaccines. But on vaccine communication, our progress has been remarkably poor.

I’ve spent the past few years studying the science of motivating people to think again. And I keep seeing government officials, healthcare professionals, and citizens make the same three mistakes.

1. “Vaccines are safe and effective”

With skeptical audiences, one-sided messages tend to backfire. Expressing high certainty under low trust is a recipe for disaster. It sounds like you’re sweeping the truth under the rug. When you bring your defense attorney to court, they show up with their best prosecutor to annihilate your arguments.

No medical treatment is 100% safe or 100% effective. Research reveals that experts are more persuasive when they acknowledge uncertainty. We’re all more convincing when we address counterarguments. Cardiac surgeons don’t go around saying “Open-heart surgery is safe and effective.” They walk you through the risks and potential benefits of the procedure so you can make an informed judgment.

What if we took a similar approach with vaccines? We should make it clear that yes, vaccines have risks, but COVID carries risks too. Then we can explain the available data suggesting that the risks of getting COVID—both in probability and severity—far exceed the risks of adverse vaccine reactions. For example, even though the mortality rate is low among younger people, COVID is still affecting them severely: some data suggest that one in four cases are long-haul.

2. “The anti-vaxxers are to blame”

Many people are in the “movable middle”—they have concerns, but they haven’t made up their minds yet. Labeling them as anti-vaxxers paints them into a corner of resistance, pushing them to become more extreme and more entrenched. It also makes this stance seem more common than it actually is.

We might be better off talking about vaccine hesitancy. Instead of turning opposition into a permanent identity—you’re the kind of person who’s against vaccines—we can frame it as a temporary state of mind. After all, doubt is one of the key ingredients in science, and healthy skepticism is a hallmark of critical thinking. Having questions doesn’t make you an anti-vaxxer; it makes you an informed citizen.

3. “Only 49.4% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated”

Translation: half of Americans aren’t going for it! Instead of percentages, it’s more effective to highlight the raw numbers: over 162 million Americans are fully vaccinated. That sends a very different message: vaccinations are wildly popular. You could fill over 6,000 Super Bowl stadiums with vaccinated Americans.

The psychology of social proof tells us that under uncertainty, people are especially motivated to follow the lead of similar others. When it comes to energy conservation, for example, people are most likely to be influenced by the norms in their local community. We look to our neighbors for clues about what’s appropriate. Applying that logic to the COVID vaccines, if you’re in Louisiana, you can share that nearly 2 million Louisianans have gotten at least one dose.

The way forward

Of course, all of these messages need to be tested with COVID vaccine communication. It’s time for us to apply the same scientific rigor to our messaging as we have to the vaccines.

Social scientists have tested other messages around vaccination and COVID prevention efforts, and some of the more promising ones include scarcity (“a shot has been reserved for you”), reciprocity (“healthcare workers have put their lives on the line—we can do our part”), and prosocial consequences (“don’t spread it” rather than “don’t get it”).

While we’re waiting for government and medical experts to hone their messaging, we can all have more thoughtful conversations about vaccine hesitancy. If you haven’t already been trained in motivational interviewing, one of the main lessons is that telling people why they should change is less effective than helping them find their own reasons to change.

A good starting point is to ask: What do you see as the pros and cons of the COVID vaccines? And what would convince you that the benefits outweigh the risks?

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8 Comments

  • Ian Bremmer
    Writes GZERO World with Ian Bremmer
    How do you think de facto vaccine mandates, like what we're seeing in NYC, fit in here? Are they helpful, or more likely to backfire?
    3
    • 40w
    2 Replies
  • Jeremy Faust
    Writes Inside Medicine
    100% that communicating the risk-benefit is important. As Céline Gounder, Katie Dickerson Mayes, and I wrote in the Times last month "Bad things inevitably happen to a small number of people after any vaccination, a few caused by the vaccines, but most…
    See more
    3
    • 40w
  • Andrew Revkin
    Writes Sustain What
    Why does this issue continue to be relevant? My older son is now solidly fighting vaccination (he was infected along with his fiancee pre vaccine) as a power/control issue.
    • 17w
  • Campbell Brown
    great piece Adam.
    • 40w
  • Amy Arnold
    Good piece Adam and it's on target. Based on my conversations, the people who haven't taken the shot are not anti-vaxxers. They are skeptics who are in the movable middle as you said. They are intelligent people, who take their health seriously and don…
    See more
    3
    • 40w
  • Robert Riggins
    I'm not anti vaxx but I am a logical thinking person. All the fancy double talk in the world isn't convincing me to get this one till they have a few more years to work out the problems. Stories coming out more and more every day how hey are lying abo…
    See more
    • 29w
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