We havenât talked about the âvaccine debateâ
here on SciShow because there is no debate to have. Vaccines donât cause autism, and they save
millions of lives every year. But there is a debate, whether or not it makes
sense. And a lot of people counter this with ridicule,
but we at SciShow arenât about judgment, weâre about science, and using it to better
understand the world. We see the anti-vaccination movement as a
phenomenon to be understood. So instead of making yet another statement
about how, yes, vaccines are good, and no, they donât cause autism, letâs use science
to understand why fewer and fewer people are getting their children vaccinated. Iâm Hank Green, and this is SciShow. [Intro] First, letâs discuss how we ended up with
this imagined link between vaccinations and autism in the first place. Autism diagnoses are DEFINITELY on the rise;
now many scientists believe that this is largely or even completely because of more effective
diagnosis, and changes in how the diagnosis is reported. So while diagnoses of autism are increasing,
we canât say for sure whether the incidence of autism is also increasing. If it is, it must be because of some environmental
factor. Now, when we talk about autism, weâre really
referring to range of developmental disorders, which can affect a personâs ability to communicate
or socialize, or cause them to develop patterns of behavior that become pretty specific and
inflexible. The condition can manifest itself in a lot
of different ways, but youâve probably heard of them referred to together as autism spectrum
disorder, or ASD. While ASD has been found to have some strong
genetic components to it, there also seem to be environmental factors at work as well. And thatâs really the root of this controversy
â we simply donât know precisely what causes autism. And in the absence of an explanations, people
try to make sense of it themselves. And the way our brains do that is almost entirely
with cognitive bias. A cognitive bias is really just anything that
skews how we process and interpret new information. There are tons of different kinds of bias
-- some biases cause us to ignore certain data; others lead us to put too much emphasis
on certain data; they can even drive us to focus on facts that are actually irrelevant
to what weâre observing. But essentially, when we hear a hypothesis
and think, âYeah, that âMakes Senseââ really what weâre saying is âYeah, that
fits with my cognitive biases.â And so people blame all sorts of things for
Autism...plastics, pesticides, the use of anti-depressants during pregnancy, GMOs, sugar,
gut bacteria, and vaccines. Basically, you start with whatever makes the
most sense to the person doing the hypothesizing. The onset of autism typically happens in one
of two ways. Either parents notice a delay in language
development, typically around the first birthday. Or they notice an apparently sudden loss of
existing development, which might happen all the way up through the third birthday. Now, humans are pattern recognition machines. We need to be able to figure out what behaviors
and strategies lead to positive outcomes. But, even more than that, weâre on the lookout
for things that lead to negative outcomes. This over-weighting of negative outcomes is
a well known psychological effect called ânegativity bias.â So imagine you wake up one morning and your
car doesnât work. Your brain is going to want to know what happened. Did you leave your lights on? Did you drive though a huge puddle yesterday
that maybe shorted something out? There has to be SOME reason why it wonât
start! On the other hand, if you get in a 15 year
old car and it starts up just fine after having had a bad week of barely getting going, you
tend to not wonder âWhat went right!?â We spend far more cognitive resources attempting
to figure out why a bad thing happened than we do trying to determine why something good
happened. In psychology, the search for these explanations
is called âExplanatory Attributionâ and different people have different âexplanatory
stylesâ. Some people are more prone to blame themselves,
while others search for an external event to blame. But one thing is clear: we are very bad at
not blaming anything. Itâs not surprising that parents of children
with autism, especially parents who notice a sudden loss of previous development, will
search for a possible cause. And when the most significant recent event
in the health of the child was a vaccination, as can be said for many moments in the life
of a young American, we might identify that as a potential cause and deem that link worthy
of further examination. Now this, is completely logical. The problem is that over a dozen peer-reviewed
papers have found no correlation between autism and the MMR vaccine, or any other vaccine
for that matter. And yet, when you Google vaccines and autism,
a fair number of the results claim that there is a link between the two, and that that link
is being covered up either by the government or by big corporations. A parent, already experiencing frustration
with the medical communityâs inability to tell them why this thing has happened to their
child, will, on the internet, find a vibrant community of similarly frustrated people who
share their values and experiences. These communities are full of anecdotes that
draw connections between vaccines and autism. And so, unsurprisingly, some people become
convinced that they have found the reason for their childâs disability. Once their mind has been made up, confirmation
bias sets in. Confirmation bias is simply our tendency to
more readily, and with less scrutiny, accept information, anecdotes, and worldviews that
confirm our existing beliefs. And, again, it is a completely normal thing
that every person does. Indeed, trying to convince someone that a
previously held belief is incorrect has been proven to actually increase their affinity
for that idea. And so a community is born, and the safety
of vaccines is called into question. And once the procedure for getting a vaccine
goes from the doctor telling you that it is now time for a vaccine -- and 99% of parents
agreeing because that person went through medical school -- to it being a question to
ponder, vaccination rates will go down. A 2011 study showed that parents who think
about vaccines before their child is born are eight times less likely to vaccinate their
children. Basically, when given an opportunity to research
on their own, what they find is confusing. And when confused, the default choice is to
simply take no action. This is an example of yet another bias, called
omission bias. In effect, we judge harmful actions as less
moral than harmful inactions, or omissions. In fact, a frequently cited study found that,
when the choice to vaccinate is framed as an action, the average parent will only vaccinate
their child if not vaccinating is at least TWO TIMES more dangerous than vaccinating. This has to do with our perception of future
regret. Parents report that theyâll feel worse if
they take an action and it harms their child, than if they donât act and the child is
harmed by a failure to act. This perception of potential regret can be
so strong that even bringing up the choice of acting versus not acting seems to be counter-productive. A 2013 study found that attempts to convince
parents to vaccinate their children actually decreased the percentage who went on to choose
vaccination. If vaccination is presented as a personal
choice, instead of a necessity for good public health, then potentially harmful inaction
can seem more moral than potentially harmful action, and vaccination rates go down. Parents are choosing to âlet nature take
its course.â And as you might expect, this effect is much
stronger in people with a measurable ânaturalness bias.â This is just a tendency to perceive things
that come from nature as being inherently less threatening than things that we invent
ourselves. One way psychologists measure this bias is
by asking a subject if theyâd prefer a substance extracted from an herb or one synthesized
in a lab, even if theyâre chemically identical. And of course, others have biases against
big government or big corporations, and these ideas about vaccinations fit well with those
worldviews. Confirmation bias at work again. But even people who donât hold those biases
end up being more likely not to vaccinate if they start doing research before their
baby is born. This is because of another failure of the
human brain. We are terrible at what psychologists call
âRisk Perception.â Given the merest sliver of a possibility that
vaccines will cause developmental disorders, parents are now weighing a disease they have
seen, autism, against diseases they have never seen. Since the 1970s, measles has been pretty much
unheard of. Measles doesnât scare people my age for
the same reason a giant man-eating squirrel doesnât scare us...weâve never seen it. Risk perception is basically a science all
on its own, and we have found that vague, future hazards, like the future probability
of an illness, are far less frightening than immediate, specific hazards, like the sudden
onset of autism. So, amazingly, the success of vaccines is
one of the reasons that people are less likely to vaccinate their children. So yes, it turns out humans are complicated,
and this is a complicated problem. Humans are inherently bad at understanding
the effects of self-selecting samples -- like online anti-vaccine forums -- and often completely
unable to accept that a negative outcome could really be the result of something thatâs
beyond their control -- and still not very well understood. This is not a âanti-vaxxerâ problem; itâs
a human problem. Those of us who trust science or have built
an understanding of statistics and bias simply have had different lives than people who more
heavily weight anecdotes or the opinions of their friends, or strangers they meet online
who feel the same way. So next time you find yourself frustrated
about the decline in vaccinations in America, remember that itâs only because of the dramatic
success of vaccines that we could even think of having this debate, and that those anti-vaccine
activists are being driven by the exact same logic traps and cognitive biases that every
one of us suffers from. Only by understanding and accepting these
psychological pitfalls that weâre all so susceptible to will we be able to solve this
problem. And thatâs what science is all about. Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow,
where we really do try to be objective. And we objectively believe that the universe
is amazing and fantastic. And if you want to join us in understanding
it and all of the stuff in it, including our brains, you can go to youtube.com/scishow
and subscribe.
This is a reminder of why I love the Green brothers. Hank is young still, and fallible as we all are, but he's older than me and wiser, and duh! There was a wiser way to go about this situation than my frustration-fueled machine gunning of the facts. Empathy.
What bothers me the most is how incredibly disrespectful the anti-vaccination movement is towards people with autism. It's like they rather risk having a dead child than a child with autism. Most autistic folk aren't too different from non-autistic folk, they just have a bit more quirks and are more stubborn - think Asperger's.
Also worth a watch: SciShow's video (somewhat prefacing this one) on measles.
I usually watch videos with closed captions on if they are available so I don't miss as many complicated things. However, Hank Green's white shirt in this video made it hard to see them and I was thinking that this could be a problem for people who actually require the captions to understand the video.
However, this was a really interesting video and it still angers me the the original biased study which falsely suggested that the MMR vaccine caused autism is still having an effect and is effectively causing deaths. This is why peer review and the rules about investigations are so important.
This is why the Media should stop bickering and politicizing themselves if they want to be taken seriously today and tomorrow, and in the distant future.