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The language of vaccination campaigns during COVID-19

Vilar-Lluch, Sara; McClaughlin, Emma; Knight, Dawn; Adolphs, Svenja; Nichele, Elena

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Authors

Sara Vilar-Lluch

Dawn Knight

SVENJA ADOLPHS SVENJA.ADOLPHS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of English Language and Linguistics

Elena Nichele



Contributors

Sara Vilar-Lluch
Researcher

Dawn Knight
Researcher

Elena Nichele
Researcher

Abstract

Understanding what makes communication effective when designing public health messages is of key importance. This applies in particular to vaccination campaigns, which aim to encourage vaccine uptake and respond to vaccine hesitancy and dispel any myth or misinformation. This paper explores the ways in which the governments of Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) promoted COVID-19 vaccination as a first-line strategy and studies health message effectiveness by examining the language of official vaccination campaigns, vaccine uptake across the different nations and the health message preferences of unvaccinated and vaccine sceptic individuals. The study considers communications beginning at the first lockdown until the point when daily COVID-19 updates ended for each nation. A corpus linguistic analysis of official government COVID-19 updates is combined with a qualitative examination of the expression of evaluation in governmental discourses, feedback from a Public Involvement Panel and insights from a nationally representative survey of adults in Great Britain to explore message production and reception. Fully vaccinated, unvaccinated and sceptic respondents showed similar health messaging preferences and perceptions of health communication efficacy, but unvaccinated and sceptic participants reported lower levels of compliance for all health messages considered. These results suggest that issues in health communication are not limited to vaccination hesitancy, and that in the future, successful vaccination campaigns need to address the determining factors of public attitudes and beliefs besides communication strategies.

Citation

Vilar-Lluch, S., McClaughlin, E., Knight, D., Adolphs, S., & Nichele, E. (in press). The language of vaccination campaigns during COVID-19. Medical Humanities, 49(3), 487-496. https://doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2022-012583

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 21, 2023
Online Publication Date Apr 6, 2023
Deposit Date Mar 22, 2023
Publicly Available Date Mar 23, 2023
Journal Medical Humanities
Print ISSN 1468-215X
Electronic ISSN 1473-4265
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 49
Issue 3
Pages 487-496
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2022-012583
Keywords Philosophy; Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/18811006

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