Scientific Reports (Jul 2022)

Short-sighted decision-making by those not vaccinated against COVID-19

  • Julia G. Halilova,
  • Samuel Fynes-Clinton,
  • Leonard Green,
  • Joel Myerson,
  • Jianhong Wu,
  • Kai Ruggeri,
  • Donna Rose Addis,
  • R. Shayna Rosenbaum

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-15276-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Widespread vaccination is necessary to minimize or halt the effects of many infectious diseases, including COVID-19. Stagnating vaccine uptake can prolong pandemics, raising the question of how we might predict, prevent, and correct vaccine hesitancy and unwillingness. In a multinational sample (N = 4,452) recruited from 13 countries that varied in pandemic severity and vaccine uptake (July 2021), we examined whether short-sighted decision-making as exemplified by steep delay discounting—choosing smaller immediate rewards over larger delayed rewards—predicts COVID-19 vaccination status. Delay discounting was steeper in unvaccinated individuals and predicted vaccination status over and above demographics or mental health. The results suggest that delay discounting, a personal characteristic known to be modifiable through cognitive interventions, is a contributing cause of differences in vaccine compliance.