TY - JOUR
T1 - Parental Risk Preferences and Children’s Vaccination Coverage
AU - CODA MOSCAROLA, FLAVIA
AU - zaccagni, sarah
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This paper examines vaccine hesitancy from a behavioral economics perspective, focusing on how parental risk preferences,
altruism, and vaccine distrust affect children's vaccination rates. A model of parental investment in children's health
is developed and expanded using empirical data from WHO, UNICEF, the World Bank, and the Global Preferences Survey.
The study utilizes a fractional response probit model to analyze data from 69 countries, accounting for both stringent
and non-stringent vaccination policies. Results show that risk aversion, altruism, and trust are positively associated with
vaccination coverage, with the impact varying by policy stringency. In countries with stringent policies, risk aversion is
the most significant factor, while altruism and distrust are more influential in countries with less strict policies. However,
the effects of these factors are modest, with income levels accounting for most cross-country differences. The study calls
for further research using more recent, individual-level data. Highlights We develop a theoretical framework suggesting
that parents with higher risk aversion and altruism are more likely to invest in their children's health, particularly in vaccination
decisions, extending current literature insights. Our model is empirically tested using macro-level data on parental
risk preferences and altruism from the Global Preferences Survey (GPS), combined with WHO and UNICEF vaccination
coverage data for ten diseases in one-year-old children. The analysis reveals a positive association between parental risk
aversion, altruism, and vaccination coverage across 69 countries, moderated by the stringency of national vaccination policies.
In countries with stringent vaccination policies, risk aversion predominantly drives vaccination coverage, whereas
in less stringent environments, altruism and vaccine distrust play a more significant role. Vaccination coverage is notably
lower in low-income countries.
AB - This paper examines vaccine hesitancy from a behavioral economics perspective, focusing on how parental risk preferences,
altruism, and vaccine distrust affect children's vaccination rates. A model of parental investment in children's health
is developed and expanded using empirical data from WHO, UNICEF, the World Bank, and the Global Preferences Survey.
The study utilizes a fractional response probit model to analyze data from 69 countries, accounting for both stringent
and non-stringent vaccination policies. Results show that risk aversion, altruism, and trust are positively associated with
vaccination coverage, with the impact varying by policy stringency. In countries with stringent policies, risk aversion is
the most significant factor, while altruism and distrust are more influential in countries with less strict policies. However,
the effects of these factors are modest, with income levels accounting for most cross-country differences. The study calls
for further research using more recent, individual-level data. Highlights We develop a theoretical framework suggesting
that parents with higher risk aversion and altruism are more likely to invest in their children's health, particularly in vaccination
decisions, extending current literature insights. Our model is empirically tested using macro-level data on parental
risk preferences and altruism from the Global Preferences Survey (GPS), combined with WHO and UNICEF vaccination
coverage data for ten diseases in one-year-old children. The analysis reveals a positive association between parental risk
aversion, altruism, and vaccination coverage across 69 countries, moderated by the stringency of national vaccination policies.
In countries with stringent vaccination policies, risk aversion predominantly drives vaccination coverage, whereas
in less stringent environments, altruism and vaccine distrust play a more significant role. Vaccination coverage is notably
lower in low-income countries.
UR - https://iris.uniupo.it/handle/11579/222764
U2 - 10.1007/s10198-025-01880-6
DO - 10.1007/s10198-025-01880-6
M3 - Article
SN - 1618-7601
JO - THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
JF - THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
ER -