No evidence for causal effects of trust in science on intentions for health-related behavior.

No evidence for causal effects of trust in science on intentions for health-related behavior.

Publication date: Dec 11, 2025

Many researchers and policymakers assume that interventions targeting trust in science will be key for promoting health-related behaviors, including in the context of curbing the spread of disease. One central finding from the past pandemic is that trust in science predicted health-related protection intentions and behaviors, such as social distancing and vaccination. Yet, it is unclear whether the observed correlation between trust in science and protection intentions does indeed imply causation. Across our studies (total N = 5311), we successfully replicated this correlation. However, when experimentally manipulating self-reported trust in science, we found no evidence for causal effects on protection intentions. This absence of meaningful effects was confirmed by equivalence tests, an internal meta-analysis (N = 3761), and a machine learning algorithm. These results question the causal importance of short-term changes in trust in science for protection intentions. Drawing the right lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic will be essential for effective future policy responses.

Concepts Keywords
Future Assume
Pandemic Behavior
Policymakers Behaviors
Science Causal
Vaccination Correlation
Evidence
Health
Intentions
Interventions
Key
Pandemic
Policymakers
Protection
Related
Targeting

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic

Original Article

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *