Abstract

BackgroundThis paper examines the role of perceived disease risk in vaccination behavior. Using health insurance claims data, I estimate the effect of local measles outbreaks in Germany on first- and second-dose measles vaccinations in children as well as catch-up vaccinations in adults. MethodsIn my analytic strategy, I exploit the variation in timing and location of regional disease outbreaks and estimate a two-way fixed effects model with birth cohort and region fixed effects. The basic underlying assumption is that measles outbreaks alter perceptions regarding the disease risk. The robustness of this approach concerning possible bias due to heterogeneous treatment effects under differential treatment timing is assessed through the use of alternative estimators. ResultsMeasles outbreaks within a region increase the share of children who receive their vaccination on time by 0.8 percentage points for both the first and second vaccination. This corresponds to a reduction in the share of not timely vaccinated children of about 1.0% and 1.6% for the first and second doses, respectively. Results further show an increase in the rate of monthly catch-up vaccinations in adults by about 10% for the age group 20–30 to up to 46% for those at ages 40–50 in the first six months after an outbreak. One important finding is that regional outbreaks do not lead to increases in vaccinations in other regions even if public attention extends beyond the affected region. ConclusionsThese results suggest that behavioral responses are driven by affective rather than deliberative risk perception. Also, vaccination effects can be observed only in the few months following the outbreak, which indicates that changes in the perceived disease risk due to a local measles outbreak are short-lived and fade away quickly once the disease outbreak is over.

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