News roundup
Media misled the public over the MMR vaccine,
study says
Abergavenny Roger Dobson
Most people wrongly believed that doctors and scientists are equally divided
over the safety of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine, according to
new research carried out during the high profile public debate over the vaccine
last year.
At the height of the media coverage the impression was created that medical
scientists were split down the middle over the vaccines safety, including
reports of links with autism, say the studys authors, from Cardiff University.
Less than one in four people were aware that the bulk of the evidence
favoured the vaccine, say the authors of the study. "Although almost all
scientific experts rejected the claim of a link between MMR and autism, 53% of
those [the people] surveyed at the height of the media coverage of the issues
assumed that because both sides of the debate received equal media coverage,
there must be equal evidence for each. Only 23% of the population were aware
that the bulk of evidence favoured supporters of the vaccine," says the study.
The researchers looked at how three subjectsthe MMR vaccine, genetics, and
climate changewere reported by the media and at the publics knowledge of the
issues.
The research was carried out between January and September 2002 and involved
two national surveys of more than 1000 people and an analysis of 2214 newspaper,
radio, and television stories. The study included 561 media reports on MMR over
a seven month period. More than half these stories were concentrated in one
month between 28 January and 28 February 2002.
The focus of the media reporting was the possible link between the MMR
vaccine and autism, a link mentioned in more than two thirds of the articles,
say the authors, Professor Ian Hargreaves, Professor Justin Lewis, and Ms Tammy
Spears, who carried out the study with funding from the Economic and Social
Research Council.
Almost half (48%) of the people surveyed believed that on public health
issues the media should wait for confirmatory studies before reporting "alarming
research," say the authors. But 34% believed that concerns about the MMR vaccine
such as those of Dr Andrew Wakefield vaccine should be reported.
"The survey confirms that the news media play a key role in informing the way
people understand issues such as the controversy around MMR. While [Dr]
Wakefields claims are of legitimate public interest, our report shows that
research questioning the safety of something that is widely used should be
approached with caution, both by scientists and journalists," said Professor
Lewis.
"This is especially the case where any decline in confidence can have serious
consequences for public health. The research also has implications for the
debate about fairness in journalism, suggesting that legal definitions of
impartiality in broadcast journalism should not be interpreted in a simplistic
fashion."
Towards a Better Map: Science, the Public and the Media is available
at the Economic and Social Research Councils website (www.esrc.ac.uk)