I Immunise: An evaluation of a values-based campaign to change attitudes and beliefs

Vaccine
Volume 33, Issue 46, Pages 6135-6370 (17 November 2015)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/33/46
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I Immunise: An evaluation of a values-based campaign to change attitudes and beliefs
Original Research Article
Pages 6235-6240
Katie Attwell, Melanie Freeman
Abstract
This paper presents results of a study determining the efficacy of a values based approach to changing vaccination attitudes. It reports an evaluation survey of the “I Immunise” campaign, conducted in Fremantle, Western Australia, in 2014. “I Immunise” explicitly engaged with values and identity; formulated by locals in a community known for its alternative lifestyles and lower-than-national vaccine coverage rates. Data was collected from 304 online respondents. The campaign polarised attitudes towards vaccination and led some to feel more negatively. However, it had an overall positive response with 77% of participants. Despite the campaign only resonating positively with a third of parents who had refused or doubted vaccines, it demonstrates an important in-road into this hard-to-reach group.