“It is absolutely biologically impossible to get the flu from
the vaccine,” said Dr. Gregory A. Poland, a professor of
medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who studies
the immunogenetics of vaccine response.
He was not involved
with the new study.
It seems logical that dispelling this myth would lead to more
people getting the shot, but it may not work that way in real
life, Poland told Reuters Health by phone.
“Things that seem logical and intuitive can have perverse
effects that we don’t always understand or expect,” he said.
The new results show that teaching patients about the safety
and efficacy of the vaccine shouldn’t be ‘one size fits all,’ he
said.
“I think we have to move toward a model where I as a
physician have to change my style of educating based on my
listening and understanding what your educational needs are,” he
said.
In an online survey in 2012, 1,000 U.S. adults were asked how
concerned they were about side effects from the influenza
vaccine.
A quarter of people said they were extremely or very
concerned.
Next, the 1,000 respondents were randomly divided into three
groups. One group got information from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) website on the safety of the flu
vaccine. The second group received information from the CDC on
the danger of the flu itself. The third group did not have any
information.
Then the respondents answered questions about whether or not
one can get the flu from the vaccine, their belief in the safety
of the vaccine, and their intent to get a flu shot in the coming
year.
More than 40 percent of people believed the statement “the
flu vaccine can give you the flu” was at least somewhat
accurate, and four percent believed the vaccine was not at all
safe, according to results in Vaccine.
In the group that read CDC information on the safety of the
vaccine, fewer people believed it could give you the flu.
But the group that read about the dangers of the flu still
had misperceptions about the flu vaccine, the authors found.
Overall, about a third of participants said they were very
unlikely to get a flu shot in the coming year – and neither
information source seemed to affect that intention.
But when the researchers only considered people who were most
concerned about side effects, reading about the safety of the
vaccine actually decreased their likelihood of getting it.
“When we defend our attitudes or beliefs against challenge we
can sometimes back ourselves further into those beliefs,” said
the lead author of the new study, Brendan Nyhan.