American Christians, political conservatives and skeptics do not believe in the getting the Covid-19 vaccine shot. Read on to know more about vaccine hesitancy among them.
Christian nationalists and political conservatives express high skepticism towards the Covid-19 vaccine, reveal two new studies published by West Virginia University sociologists. In their first report, published in Vaccine, researchers found that Christian nationalism—the belief that Christianity should permeate American civic life ‑ is one of the strongest predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and is negatively associated with having received or planning to get the vaccine.
‘Apart from American Christians, political conservatives and skeptics, people with higher levels of education were found to be less skeptical of every science issue.’
“It’s the belief that Americans are chosen by God and that God protects them,” said Katie Corcoran, associate professor of sociology and lead author of the report.“They tend not to trust science and are against government intervention so they’re more focused on individual freedoms than public health protections. It's hypothesized that those are the reasons that Christian nationalists are less likely to receive the vaccine and are more likely to not trust it.”
Corcoran and her co-authors, Christopher Scheitle, also an associate professor of sociology, and graduate research assistant Bernard DiGregorio, used a national sample of 2,000 U.S. adults who completed a survey last spring on religious identities and behaviors as well as attitudes toward COVID-19.
To measure Christian nationalism, respondents were asked, “To what extent do you agree or disagree that the federal government should declare the United States a Christian nation?”
Scheitle noted that it’s important to not assume that all Christians or evangelicals fit the bill as Christian nationalists, which account for roughly 20 percent of the U.S. population.
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The politics of COVID
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Those findings were published in Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World.
“There’s a narrative around COVID-19 that you have anti-science people and pro-science people,” Scheitle said.
“This research was to try to see to what extent does COVID-19 map onto other forms of science skepticism. What we found is that political conservatism is a fairly consistent predictor of science skepticism, regardless of what issue you’re talking about.
“But there’s something specific about COVID that is making political conservatives especially more skeptical about that issue above and beyond climate change, evolution and everything else. I think it can be tied to the explicit politicization of COVID-19 policies.”
Age also played a factor in COVID-19 attitudes. Researchers found that younger individuals viewed COVID-19—from the vaccine to the virus’ very existence—with more skepticism than older people.
Meanwhile, the topic of evolution showed strong connections to religion and was the only science topic with a regional pattern, Scheitle said, as individuals residing in the South were more likely to view evolution with skepticism.
The study also found that people with higher levels of education were less skeptical of every science issue.
Researchers utilized the same dataset of 2,000 people from the previously mentioned study.
Source-Eurekalert