Anti-vaccine movements – a form of social activity for health care,, ignorance or diversion aimed at destabilizing the health situation? Part 1. epidemiological safety. vaccinations – pros and cons. Kołłątaj, W., Kołłątaj, B., Panasiuk, L., Sobieszczański, J., & Karwat, I. Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine, 27(4):544–552, 2020.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Introduction. Vaccinations are a way accepted by science of preventing infectious diseases. Because of their epidemiological significance, vaccinations are considered compulsory in many countries and their evasion is penalized. Anti-vaccine movements may pose a threat to the epidemiological situation in many countries. The study presents the arguments formulated by opponents of vaccination and provides counter-arguments. Materials and method. The study is based on the analysis of data stored in scientific databases, information obtained from Google, Bing and Yahoo on the Internet, as well as newspapers, magazines and opinion-forming websites. Results. The slogans propagated by anti-vaccination movements are usually based on easily proven erroneous theories and lies, although there are also arguments expressing belief in the conspiracy of governments, politicians and vaccine manufacturers, or incompetence of scientists and practitioners. Conclusions. In recent years in Poland, the activity of movements against vaccination has increased significantly, and their propaganda, through its negative impact on social attitudes, threatens to destabilize the epidemiological situation. Analysis of arguments used by the opponents of vaccination suggests a lack of reliable knowledge, religious overtones (addressed to people with fundamentalist personalities), or the ill-will attitudes of anti-vaccine individuals/groups used for their own purposes. Familiarization with the arguments of anti-vaccine propaganda is necessary in order to implement effective methods of fighting such attitudes and beliefs. © 2020, Institute of Agricultural Medicine. All rights reserved.
@article{kollataj_anti-vaccine_2020-1,
	title = {Anti-vaccine movements – a form of social activity for health care,, ignorance or diversion aimed at destabilizing the health situation? {Part} 1. epidemiological safety. vaccinations – pros and cons},
	volume = {27},
	shorttitle = {Anti-vaccine movements – a form of social activity for health care,, ignorance or diversion aimed at destabilizing the health situation?},
	doi = {10.26444/aaem/126013},
	abstract = {Introduction. Vaccinations are a way accepted by science of preventing infectious diseases. Because of their epidemiological significance, vaccinations are considered compulsory in many countries and their evasion is penalized. Anti-vaccine movements may pose a threat to the epidemiological situation in many countries. The study presents the arguments formulated by opponents of vaccination and provides counter-arguments. Materials and method. The study is based on the analysis of data stored in scientific databases, information obtained from Google, Bing and Yahoo on the Internet, as well as newspapers, magazines and opinion-forming websites. Results. The slogans propagated by anti-vaccination movements are usually based on easily proven erroneous theories and lies, although there are also arguments expressing belief in the conspiracy of governments, politicians and vaccine manufacturers, or incompetence of scientists and practitioners. Conclusions. In recent years in Poland, the activity of movements against vaccination has increased significantly, and their propaganda, through its negative impact on social attitudes, threatens to destabilize the epidemiological situation. Analysis of arguments used by the opponents of vaccination suggests a lack of reliable knowledge, religious overtones (addressed to people with fundamentalist personalities), or the ill-will attitudes of anti-vaccine individuals/groups used for their own purposes. Familiarization with the arguments of anti-vaccine propaganda is necessary in order to implement effective methods of fighting such attitudes and beliefs. © 2020, Institute of Agricultural Medicine. All rights reserved.},
	number = {4},
	journal = {Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine},
	author = {Kołłątaj, W.P. and Kołłątaj, B. and Panasiuk, L. and Sobieszczański, J. and Karwat, I.D.},
	year = {2020},
	keywords = {9 Post-truth, fake-news and sciences, Argumentation, Misinformation, PRINTED (Fonds papier), Religious arguments, Safety of vaccination, Vaccinations, Vaccine opponents},
	pages = {544--552},
}

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