Navin, Mark (2013) Disgust, Contamination, and Vaccine Refusal. In: [2013] 3rd Annual Values in Medicine, Science, and Technology Conference (Dallas; 22-24 May 2013).
| PDF - Draft Version Download (379Kb) | Preview |
Abstract
Vaccine refusers often seem motivated by disgust, and they invoke ideas of purity, contamination and sanctity. Unfortunately, the emotion of disgust and its companion ideas are not directly responsive to the probabilistic and statistical evidence of research science. It follows that increased efforts to promulgate the results of vaccine science are not likely to contribute to increased rates of vaccination among persons who refuse vaccines because of (what has been called) the ‘ethics of sanctity’. Furthermore, the fact that disgust-based vaccine refusal is not monolithic – vaccine refusers manifest disgust at different objects and invoke different ideas about purity and contamination – further complicates public health efforts to increase vaccination rates.
| Export/Citation: | EndNote | BibTeX | Dublin Core | ASCII/Text Citation (Chicago) | HTML Citation | OpenURL |
| Social Networking: |
| Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (UNSPECIFIED) |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | Specific Sciences > Medicine > Biomedical Ethics General Issues > Ethical Issues General Issues > Science and Society General Issues > Science Education |
| Conferences and Volumes: | [2013] 3rd Annual Values in Medicine, Science, and Technology Conference (Dallas; 22-24 May 2013) |
| Depositing User: | Dr. Mark Navin |
| Date Deposited: | 17 May 2013 15:14 |
| Last Modified: | 17 May 2013 15:14 |
| Item ID: | 9767 |
| URI: | http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/id/eprint/9767 |
Actions (login required)
| View Item |


