Organized Opposition and Celebrity Advocacy Against Vaccine-Autism Science
Beyond psychological appeal and online misinformation, organized public opposition helped the vaccine-autism myth persist. Some parents of children with autism mounted a campaign against scientists who refuted the vaccine-autism link. Politicians and well-known celebrities also weighed in on the controversy; for example, actress Jenny McCarthy, who believed that a vaccination had caused her son's autism, co-authored a book on the matter.
0
1
Tags
Psychology @ OpenStax
Introduction to Psychology @ OpenStax Course
OpenStax
OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook
Psychology
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Related
A parent on a social media forum posts: "My child was diagnosed with a complex developmental disorder shortly after receiving routine childhood immunizations. It's too much of a coincidence. The doctors can't give me a clear reason why this happened, but the timing of the shots seems like the only logical explanation. I need a simple answer, not a bunch of complicated studies I can't understand." Which psychological factor best explains this parent's reasoning for connecting the immunizations to the disorder?
A parent, feeling overwhelmed after their child is diagnosed with a complex neurodevelopmental disorder, reads an online article that claims the disorder is caused by a single, specific environmental factor introduced in early childhood. The parent finds this explanation more comforting and easier to grasp than the multi-faceted, and often uncertain, explanations from scientists. Which cognitive or psychological principle best explains the parent's preference for the simpler, though scientifically unsupported, explanation?
Survey Data on Persistent Vaccine-Autism Fears and Vaccination Refusal
Organized Opposition and Celebrity Advocacy Against Vaccine-Autism Science
Parallel Between the 1970s Diet-ADHD Myth and the Vaccine-Autism Myth