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The strength of conspiracy beliefs versus scientific information: the case of COVID-19 preventive behaviours

Medicine and Health

The strength of conspiracy beliefs versus scientific information: the case of COVID-19 preventive behaviours

D. Pinazo-calatayud, S. Agut-nieto, et al.

Discover how conspiracy beliefs about COVID-19's origin shape behaviors related to preventive measures like vaccination and social distancing. This research, conducted by Daniel Pinazo-Calatayud and colleagues from University of Jaume I and Miguel Hernández University, reveals the surprising influence of these beliefs, even when faced with objective information.... show more
Abstract
Controlling the spread of COVID-19 requires individuals to adopt preventive behaviours, but conspiracy beliefs about its origin are spreading. The aim of this paper is to better comprehend the strength of conspiracy beliefs versus objective COVID-19 information to predict people's adherence to protective behaviours (getting vaccinated, being tracked through APPs, and keeping social distance from infected people). Study 1 shows that COVID-19 implicit theories detected in the Pre-study were activated as independent factors that constitute people's interpretations of the virus origin. These beliefs were related to a lesser intention to engage in preventive behaviours and a higher level of mistrust in institutional information, although some beliefs generate positive expectations about COVID-19 consequences. In Study 2, conducted with a different sample, official COVID-19 information was included as an independent variable, but this new variable did not further explain results. Lastly, Study 3 consisting of both previous samples confirmed that conspiracy beliefs had a direct effect on a lesser willingness to engage in preventive actions, a higher mistrust, and positive expectations about COVID-19 consequences. We conclude that objective COVID-19 information did not buffer the effect of conspiracy beliefs; they interfere with actions to prevent it by taking institutions as scapegoats or complicit with secret powers.
Publisher
Frontiers in Psychology
Published On
Mar 01, 2024
Authors
Daniel Pinazo-Calatayud, Sonia Agut-Nieto, Lorena Arahuete, Rosana Peris, Alfonso Barros, Carolina Vázquez-Rodríguez
Tags
conspiracy beliefs
COVID-19
preventive behaviors
vaccination
mistrust
institutional information
behavioral science
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