Issue: July 2016
June 20, 2016
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Access to detailed VAERS reports reduces vaccine acceptance

Issue: July 2016
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Recent research in Vaccine found that exposure to detailed reports from the FDA and CDC’s vaccine adverse events reporting system decreased both trust in the CDC and vaccine acceptance.

Perspective from Paul A. Offit, MD

“One of the issues in vaccine acceptance is trust,” Laura D. Scherer, PhD, assistant professor of psychological sciences at the University of Missouri, said in a press release. “Individuals, parents and vaccine opponents lack trust that doctors and the government have done sufficient research to validate the safety of vaccines. By educating participants about the [vaccine adverse events reporting system (VAERS)], we thought that this might increase trust that the CDC is doing everything that they can to research and document vaccine harms.”

Laura Scherer

Laura D. Scherer

The researchers surveyed 1,259 adults aged 18 to 70 years using data regarding serious adverse events related to HPV vaccination from 2013. Study participants were divided into three exposure groups. The first group was presented with the CDC’s standard vaccine information statement, while the second group received data from VAERS, in addition to the standard statement. VAERS information stated that of 10 million HPV vaccinations given, there were 24 vaccine-related disabilities and seven deaths. The third group read detailed reports of every severe adverse event, in addition to receiving the standard statement and VAERS data. Vaccine risks and benefits premeasures were compared with measures taken after exposure to determine the effect of each exposure.

Study results showed that those who received only the standard statement, and those who received VAERS summaries in addition to the standard statement, reported an increase in perceptions of vaccine benefits after exposure (P < .001), and a decrease in perceptions of vaccine-associated risks (P < .05). Conversely, the third group, which received detailed severe adverse events information, reported a decrease in perceived benefits of vaccination (P < .01) and an increase in perceived risks.

“When participants read the incident reports, there was a marked reduction in their willingness to vaccinate — even though most participants believed the vaccines caused few or even none of the deaths,” Scherer said in the release. “Stories about vaccine harms can influence vaccine acceptance even when people don’t completely believe them. This can potentially inform how people react to stories vs. data about vaccine harms and provides a test of publicly available data on vaccine acceptance.” – by David Costill

Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.