The ‘Science’ of Manipulation: Researchers Craft Messages of Guilt, Shame to Foster Vaccine Compliance

Via The Defender

There’s an entire field of research dedicated to developing messaging designed to persuade “vaccine-hesitant” individuals to get the COVID-19 vaccine — and none of it has anything to do with facts.

There’s an entire field of research dedicated to developing messaging designed to persuade “vaccine-hesitant” individuals to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

There’s an entire field of research dedicated to developing messaging designed to persuade “vaccine-hesitant” individuals to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

None of the messaging examined by researchers involves conveying factual evidence that supports the claims — widely disseminated by Big Pharma, Big Media and public health agencies — that the vaccines are “safe” and “effective.”

Researchers last month published the results of a clinical trial involving two survey experiments on how to manufacture consent for COVID vaccines.

The Yale-sponsored study, “Persuasive messaging to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake intentions,” examined how different persuasive messages affected 1) intentions to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, 2) willingness to persuade friends and relatives to get the vaccine, 3) fear of those who have not been vaccinated, and 4) social judgment of people who choose not to vaccinate.

According to the study’s authors:

“Given the considerable amount of skepticism about the safety and efficacy of a COVID-19 vaccine, it has become increasingly important to understand how public health communication can play a role in increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake.”

The paper did not address the underlying reasons someone might have concerns about the safety or efficacy of COVID vaccines but focused instead exclusively on how to persuade them to get the vaccine.

From the paper:

“We conducted two pre-registered experiments to study how different persuasive messages affect intentions to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, willingness to persuade friends and relatives to receive one, and negative judgments of people who choose not to vaccinate.

“In the first experiment, we tested the efficacy of a large number of messages against an untreated control condition … In Experiment 2, we retested the most effective messages from Experiment 1 on a nationally representative sample of American adults.”

The messages tested by the researchers have been woven into mainstream media narratives and public health campaigns throughout the world. But the study completion date for part 1 was July 8, 2020, which means all of these messages were created prior to the release of any science to support them.

The baseline information control message states:

“To end the COVID-19 outbreak, it is important for people to get vaccinated against COVID-19 whenever a vaccine becomes available. Getting the COVID-19 vaccine means you are much less likely to get COVID-19 or spread it to others. Vaccines are safe and widely used to prevent diseases and vaccines are estimated to save millions of lives every year.”

In order to establish which messaging strategies elicited an inclination to get vaccinated, 10 additional messages were added to bring context to the baseline message.

These messages incorporated themes of self-interest, community interest, guilt, embarrassment, anger, bravery, trust in science, personal freedom, economic freedom and community economic benefit.

“We find that persuasive messaging that invokes prosocial vaccination and social image concerns is effective at increasing intended uptake and also the willingness to persuade others and judgments of non-vaccinators,” the researchers wrote.

To study the impacts of guilt, embarrassment and anger, researchers prompted people to think about how they would feel if they did not get vaccinated and then spread the virus to others.

“Emotions are thought to play a role in cooperation, either by motivating an individual to take an action because of a feeling that they experience or restraining them from taking an action because of the emotional response it would provoke in others.”

The “not brave” and “trust in sciences” messages were designed to evoke concerns about reputation and social image. The “not brave” message “reframed the idea that being unafraid of the virus is not a brave action, but instead selfish, and that the way to demonstrate bravery is by getting vaccinated because it shows strength and concern for others.”

The “trust in science” message suggested, “those who do not get vaccinated do not understand science and signal this ignorance to others.”

Personal freedom, economic freedom and community economic benefit messages drew on concerns linked to COVID restrictions.

Overall, it was a message that appealed to community interest, reciprocity and a sense of embarrassment that proved most persuasive, resulting in a 30% increase in intention to vaccinate, a 24% increase in willingness to advise a friend to get vaccinated and a 38% increase in negative opinions of people who decline the vaccines relative to the placebo message.

Community interest messages that incorporate embarrassment were determined to be most effective in getting people to encourage others to get the vaccine, while “not brave” messaging showed the most promise in creating negative judgments of non-vaccinators.

The Yale study findings are consistent with another recent paper, “Vaccination as a Social Contract,” which demonstrated people view vaccination as a social contract and are less willing to cooperate with those who refuse vaccination.

The study stated:

“The experiments consistently showed that especially compliant (i.e., vaccinated) individuals showed less generosity toward nonvaccinated individuals … It is concluded that vaccination is a social contract in which cooperation is the morally right choice.

“Individuals act upon the social contract, and more so the stronger they perceive it as a moral obligation. Emphasizing the social contract could be a promising intervention to increase vaccine uptake, prevent free riding, and, eventually, support the elimination of infectious diseases.”

Forget the facts, appeal to ‘values’

Saad Omer, one of the authors of the Yale study, has an extensive interest in public health messaging.

His efforts to combat vaccine hesitancy earned him a spot on the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Strategic Advisory Group of Experts working Group on COVID-19 Vaccines, the Sabine Vaccine Institute’s Board of Trustees and the WHO’s Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety.

In 2020, Omer initiated a “Building Vaccine Confidence Through Tailored Messaging Campaigns” project involving randomized trials in five countries using social media messaging to increase COVID and childhood vaccine coverage.

In his keynote address at the first WHO Global Infodemiology Conference in June 2020, Omer referenced “moral foundation theory” and suggested appealing to values could change decision-making behaviors.

Omer provided details about a messaging study for the HPV vaccine and discussed how similar strategies could be applied to create compliance for COVID measures:

“We wanted to test out, can we have a purity-based message? So we showed them pictures of genital warts and described a vignette, a narrative, a story, talking about how someone got genital warts and how disgusting they were and how pure vaccines are that sort of restore the sanctity of the body.

“So we just analyzed these data. This was a randomized control trial with apriori outcomes. We found approximately 20 percentage point effect on people’s likelihood of getting an HPV vaccine in the next 6 months …

“We are trying out liberty-based messages or liberty-mediated messaging around this behavior related to COVID-19 outbreak. That wearing a mask or taking precautions eventually make you free, regain your autonomy. Because if the disease rates are low, your activities can resume.”

The ‘science’ of infodemiology, infoveillance and infodemic

Omer is one of many prominent voices in what is known as the field of “infodemiology,” a term coined in 2002 by Dr. Gunter Eysenbach.

As the first infodemiologist and founder of the Journal of Medical Internet Research, Eysenbach defines infodemiology as ”the science of distribution and determinants of information in an electronic medium, specifically the Internet, or in a population, with the ultimate aim to inform public health and public policy.”

Eysenbach also coined the terms “infoveillance,” defined as “a type of syndromic surveillance that specifically utilizes information found online,” and “infodemic,” which refers to “an overabundance of information” that generally includes deliberate attempts to disseminate wrong information to undermine the public health response and advance alternative agendas of groups or individuals.”

Using just three words, Eysenbach created a scientific niche, identified a problem and proposed at least part of a so-called solution.

The WHO readily embraced this language during the pandemic. An editorial in the August 2020 issue of The Lancet began with a quote from WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “We’re not just fighting a pandemic; we’re fighting an infodemic.”

The WHO hosted several infodemiology conferences throughout the pandemic. Asserting that “misinformation costs lives,” the WHO, the United Nations and other groups created the perfect justification for social media surveillance and the suppression of dissent.

In 2020, the WHO created a resolution asking member states to take measures to leverage digital technologies to counter “misinformation” and “disinformation” and worked with more than 50 digital companies and social media platforms, including TikTok and even Tinder, to support these efforts.

The efforts to eliminate “misinformation” resulted in unprecedented censorship of virtually anything that steps outside of state-sanctioned consensus and the creation of a captive audience primed to accept a singular narrative.

A National Defense Authorization Act amendment in 2012 that legalized the use of propaganda on the American public makes it easier for governments to create self-serving narratives.

And thanks to a multi-billion dollar budget from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), we are under the influence of the best messages money can buy — whether or not those messages are true.

This is likely why the CDC, public health departments and mainstream media can make broad assertions like this: “COVID-19 vaccines were developed quickly while maintaining the highest safety standard possible,” and this: “Hydroxychloroquine shouldn’t be used to treat COVID-19,” and claim they are “fact.”

Articles and posts that challenge those assertions are regularly removed if they’re even permitted to be published in the first place.

Public health compliance: A cottage industry

Yale is not the only university researching the science of compliance. Academic institutions and government agencies throughout the world are immersed in this emerging behavioral science.

In February 2021, the University of Pennsylvania newsletter, Penn Today, published, “When the Message Matters, Use Science to Craft It,” covering behavioral scientist Jessica Fishman’s Message Effects Lab (MEL) initiative and research related to “what sways decision-making,” particularly with regard to COVID vaccination and testing.

MEL currently has partnerships and ongoing projects with the World Bank, the National Institutes of Health, the CDC, Penn Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Independence Blue Cross/Blue Shield and the Government of Canada to address health-related behaviors.

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, a branch of HHS, also sponsored research to explore influences on COVID vaccine decision-making. The study, “Attitudes Toward a Potential SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine: A Survey of U.S. Adults,” concluded:

“We found that a substantial proportion (42.2%) of participants in a national survey conducted during the coronavirus pandemic would be hesitant to accept vaccination against COVID-19. Black race was one of the strongest independent predictors of not accepting vaccination; this is especially alarming, given the outsized impact of COVID-19 among African-Americans.

“Our findings suggest that many of the individuals who responded ‘not sure’ may accept vaccination if given credible information that the vaccine is safe and effective. As vaccine development proceeds at an unprecedented pace, parallel efforts to proactively develop messages to foster vaccine acceptance are needed to achieve control of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Behavioral scientist Dr. Rupali Limaye took the messaging a step further. She teaches a free online training course, offered by Johns Hopkins University, that “prepares parents of school-age children, PTAs, community members and school staff to be Vaccine Ambassadors and promote vaccine acceptance in their communities.”

Limaye will be a panelist for an interactive webinar “Making COVID-19 vaccines APPEALing: Pilot message testing in India,” later this month.

Changing messages, same goals

While government agencies and the scientific community cling to unsupported beliefs about vaccine safety and efficacy, they appear to recognize the importance of constantly revisiting their understanding of the impacts of messaging.

UPenn’s updated research found intentions around vaccination have changed. The university’s Annenberg School for Communication reported:

“The researchers found that trust in scientific institutions and health authorities was central to individuals’ intentions to be vaccinated, especially in the early part of the pandemic. However, as the pandemic continued, other factors related to trust emerged …

“The evidence, the researchers wrote, ‘documents the need for the public health community to redouble its efforts to preemptively and persistently communicate not only about how vaccines in general work but also about their benefits, safety, and effectiveness.’”

Research from Civics Analytics, a technology company that creates data-driven audience campaigns, seconds the notion that effective messaging must evolve.

With funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the company explored COVID concerns among different demographics and determined that a “one-size-fits-all” message would not work. The company said:

“In the spring of 2021, before the Delta variant emerged in the U.S. and when vaccine mandates had not yet been implemented, we found that messages highlighting experiences that are off-limits to unvaccinated individuals (such as concerts or international travel) or emphasizing personal choice were most persuasive…

“As you’ll see in this research, the most persuasive messages have changed.”

According to Civics Analytics, FOMO (fear of missing out) and “personal decision” messages were the most impactful. But more current data indicates the “protecting children” message has become more effective at persuading people to get vaccinated.

From the study:

“For general messaging targeting all unvaccinated people, focus on protecting children from COVID-19 and on the financial ramifications of contracting the virus.”

The company found “vaccine safety,” “scary COVID statistics” and “personal story” messages were inclined to backfire and could decrease the likelihood of vaccinating.

Perhaps some good scientists will advance the learning curve and study what happens when the public discovers that “proven messages” lack supporting scientific data.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
31 Comments
James
James
February 6, 2022 8:00 am

Non vaccine vaccine hesitant?

I am not hesitant but so opposed would kill any who try and force it on me.

I would say there is no hesitancy at all.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 6, 2022 8:15 am

They aren’t doing a very good job.

Maybe barista?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
February 6, 2022 8:49 am

“There’s an entire field of research dedicated to developing messaging designed to persuade “vaccine-hesitant” individuals to get the COVID-19 vaccine — and none of it has anything to do with facts.”

If that were only true of vaccines we would be in good shape. “They” have a message generator for every occasion. For instance, the one to convince the Trump hesitant to be fooled a third time in 2024. Or the one for the war hesitant to convince us that one more war is needed before we can restore peace and prosperity for all, including white boyz.

Guest
Guest
February 6, 2022 8:58 am

They forgot to mention this part
https://www.gdass.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/bIdermans-chart-of-coercion.pdf

Method
Effect and Purpose
Variants
Isolation
Deprives victim of all social support of their ability to resist.
Develops an intense concern with self (this could be home environment)
Makes victim dependent.
Complete solitary confinement Complete or partial isolation Group Isolation
Monopolisation of Perception
Fixes attention upon immediate predicament.
Eliminates information not in compliance with demands. Punishes independence and /or resistance.
Physical isolation Darkness or Bright light Restricted movement Monotonous Food
Humiliation and Degradation
Makes resistance more ‘costly’ than compliance.
‘Animal Level’ concerns.
Personal hygiene prevented Demeaning Punishments Insults and taunts
Denial of Privacy
Exhaustion
Weakens mental and physical ability to resist.
Semi-Starvation
Sleep deprivation Prolonged interrogation Overexertion
Threats
Creates anxiety and despair Outlines cost of non-compliance
Threats to kill
Threats of abandonment/non- return
Threats against family
Vague Threats
Mysterious changes of treatment.
Occasional indulgences
Positive motivation for compliance. Hinders adjustment to deprivation
Occasional favours
Rewards for partial compliance Promises
Demonstrating Omnipotence
Suggests futility of resistance
Confrontation
Showing complete control over victims face
Forcing trivial Develops habit of compliance Enforcement of ‘rules’ demands
Amnesty International (1994)

Uncola
Uncola
February 6, 2022 9:29 am

It is concluded that vaccination is a social contract in which cooperation is the morally right choice.

This is a faux morality rooted in collectivism and generated by deception.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Uncola
February 6, 2022 10:11 am

I was under the impression that in the post modern world moral relativity was the cornerstone of their worldview. How can there be a right or wrong if everything is determined by the individual?

Uncola
Uncola
  hardscrabble farmer
February 6, 2022 2:56 pm

Indeed. To the virtue-signalers, protecting Grandma requires her infant grandchildren be injected with experimental mRNA vaccines. To them, this just seems “right”. What could possibly go wrong?

As I’ve stated before: Suffering occurs when ignorance meets reality. True morality, therefore, is generally defined over time as more reality. Real activity, then, tends to displace relativity; in all but the most obstinate and inured, of course

Lachesis Atropos
Lachesis Atropos
February 6, 2022 10:04 am

Perhaps some good scientists will advance the learning curve and study what happens when the public discovers that “proven messages” lack supporting scientific data? Would it matter at this point? It will take at least two generations to reverse the damage if we found leadership capable of doing what is needed. I do not see such leadership out there, including Trump. Anyone?

B_MC
B_MC
February 6, 2022 10:38 am

comment image

Neil Oliver, The Government Needs COVID and They Just Won’t Let It Go

Jay
Jay
February 6, 2022 10:45 am

Standard line to everyone you meet in public.
“If you take the vaccine, you’re gonna die.”

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Jay
February 6, 2022 10:47 am

Everybody is gonna die.

Barbara
Barbara
  hardscrabble farmer
February 11, 2022 8:08 pm

Yep, someday. My choice is Not by vaxx.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
February 6, 2022 11:16 am

Intelligence is kryptonite to the messaging coming from above, but unfortunately, not enough people have the necessary intelligence to see through the hype.

JayJay
JayJay
February 6, 2022 11:19 am

All this to say for intelligent folks, it boils down to this;
how many injected are disabled or dead now??
I check the home town obit every day—deaths are happening like never before.

JayJay
JayJay
February 6, 2022 11:26 am

There are more than twenty countries that have dropped all these flu/covid restrictions and are now treating it like what it is…the flu.
God wins, so hang in there you vaccine hesitant crew.
True Bloods will rule in 2-5 years. The injected can infect us. Stay clear.

The motivator for most countries is money. Billions are factored in, not millions.
These cooperating are soulless. I sometimes refer to them as clones…whose to say they aren’t??

Smedley Mulcher
Smedley Mulcher
February 6, 2022 12:10 pm

They can craft all the messages they want but I won’t be taking the jab of death.

Mark
Mark
February 6, 2022 12:54 pm

My 55 gram counter message can reach its 300 yd target at 3200 fps.

fujigm
fujigm
  Mark
February 6, 2022 2:09 pm

Long distance. It’s the next best thing to being there.

For the older crowd that remembers that AT&T shtick.

splurge
splurge
  fujigm
February 6, 2022 3:04 pm

Reach out and touch someone!

GNL
GNL
  Mark
February 6, 2022 11:16 pm

Grain?

i forget
i forget
February 6, 2022 1:47 pm

Pressure-treated piers, atop piles sunk deep against the tides & storms of sticks-&-stones words & violent body language…

…Looks like nothing’s gonna change
Everything still remains the same
I can’t do what ten people tell me to do
So I guess I’ll remain the same…

…Too

Rousseau’s Noose are these anti-social “contracts.” Pretty sure extortion & contract aren’t synonyms. Community standards apply to the community that applies said standards to themselves that comprise the community – & no one else. Spooner said it: “No contract.” Hey Pogo, trying to impose a contract is taking out a contract on your ownself, ya karmachine cog(ito-less) ya.

I’ll see your genital warts pics & raise a “Human” Photo Voltaic panel-battery farm, a la The Matrix.

Trust in/stitutions & authorities is inverse trust in self. Is why the latter is subverted, sabotaged & undermined from the get ‘em when they’re young. And that’s the tack of “adults” parenting in general, not just the star chambers & masters of the universe megalo’s who would “parent” all.

But sales makes sails outta’ tabula rasa-not sheets already preprinted with instructions to catch all that bad breath & to be blown as blown. “Injection is nice but I’d rather be blown” ~ old t-shirt

Wo/man•ipulation. Don’t care how got is got so long as it’s got.

Ghost
Ghost
  i forget
February 6, 2022 2:03 pm

30 trillion dollar debt is good if you’re getting while the getting is being gotten or if you were getting while the getting was good.

I hope you got some.

i forget
i forget
  Ghost
February 6, 2022 5:07 pm

Well, living in the splasht radius means you get splasht. That’s luckier than living in the blast radii the splashters project, but my good luck ain’t anybody elses’ “social” contract claws & I ain’t indebted to anybody for it.

But cleanliness, not dirtiness, is next to some goodliness high ideal, isn’t it? Washing up & unpacking/discarding freight is getting lighter is getting some real. If it ain’t good before you got it getting it doesn’t alchemize it to good…& I ain’t interested in “alchemy.”

(Back when he was only famous, back in Jim Rogers association days, before the “in” prefix was added – or uncovered – I got a copy of Soros’ The Alchemy of Finance. To paraphrase Dylan: “Alchemy (“Finance,” too),” I spoke the word As if a wedding vow Ah, but I was so much older then I’m younger than that now…& compared to piers, I was young even when I was old….)

Between the Lines

Beer Buddy
Beer Buddy
February 6, 2022 5:23 pm

I’ve never seen any vaccine before where you’re told “don’t do it for you, do it for your neighbor over there” or “do it for grandma”. It’s a psyop and it’s about guilt tripping you into taking their death shot.

i forget
i forget
February 6, 2022 5:23 pm

Given how well the science of wo/man•ipulation is said to have gone, is going, I got a nomination for QOTD.

Given the nth degree goings on in Israel, full retard Pfizering of all those rank & file jews, what do the usual suspects have to say about their precious penchant for their fave monolith-pinata, “the jews”?

Been watching Reacher. It was pretty bad when diminutive scientologist Cruise had the role. At least Ritchson has most of the novel character’s physical stature (he looks like a younger, meatier version of David Putty, from Seinfeld). But otoh it’s more suffused with affirmative action actors (which is just to say a different affirmative action than before). And lessoneering. Like the panty-clad lap-dancing stripper being rescued from a handsy customer by Reacher’s affaction black female PI pal (no club bouncers in sight – per scene-lesson requirements), who beats shite outta the offending man, & then tells him “when a woman” -even a pretty much naked one who you’re paying to wriggle in your lap- “says she doesn’t want to be touched….” well, the show’s like Seinfeld + a body count. Another bit of insidious is all the junk food the hero eats combined with all the scenes of ripped shirtlessness. “You can have it all.” Including the designated bad guy whipass at the hands of a girl.

Flashin’ on how far freedom’s come, some large parts of the humanos’fear, from disemboweled Braveheart’s yell to today’s disembrained mewl. But Braveheart, as depicted, wasn’t common in the 14th century & mewling wasn’t uncommon then either. Freedom’s just about where it always was.

The opposite of individualism, when that’s tarred “relativism,” are the birds of a feather flock together mobs who “decide” via might makes right…and words like these: absolutism, totalitarianism, autocracy, despotism, dictatorship, tyranny, authoritarianism, autarchy, totalism, arbitrariness. And of course “country,” complete with a wielded gov-cudgel to hold it all together (a certain amount of order’s needed to facilitate all the criminality)…for as long as those bastard-wielders can.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
February 6, 2022 7:58 pm

So, why didn’t this work on me?

Leah
Leah
February 6, 2022 8:21 pm

Nah. Not listening to your lying, gaslighting, word salad garbage.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Leah
February 6, 2022 8:41 pm

yes!

..

Leah
Leah
  Anonymous
February 6, 2022 10:20 pm

And the band played on…

Leethal
Leethal
February 6, 2022 9:09 pm

Yeah, tell me about it. I hear them on the waydio and I can see they are using carefooly crafted words, all right. But anybody with any sense in them can see this very quickly to the point of annoyance.

I can’t stand to hear it. They like to mention “children” and “safety” a lot and that by doing the JAB you are keeping everybody safe NONSENSE. Like I said, very irritating to listen to.

Another doctor comes on the air and says folks COVID is here to stay so you might as well get the jab. My heart breaks for all the stupid people he is fooling.

My friend told me his doctor said it is CRIMINAL if he does not take it. Now I realize that they were being paid thousands of dollars for every JAB sucker they could get. It seems he was the criminal one but that also tells me the medical community can NEVER be trusted anymore.

It’s not about medical care but money cannibalism. UCKF them all.

Barbara
Barbara
February 11, 2022 8:05 pm

I wonder if they have a name for what it’s called when ALL those in charge of information, medicine,you know ‘caring’ for the masses are so corrupted they couldn’t pee without a corkscrew? Oh I know what it is “Mass Information Psychopathy “!!😇👵