Why we fear vaccines but ignore plastics and pesticides
Why do so many people worry about hypothetical DNA dangers from vaccines, while barely blinking at the proven genetic havoc wreaked by plastics and pesticides in our daily lives? This selective panic isn’t just a cultural quirk—it’s a fascinating window into the psychology of risk, trust, and the stories we tell ourselves about our bodies and our future.
When our risk perception is distorted, we make choices that can undermine not only our own health but also the well-being of those we love. As we look toward the future, understanding this psychological phenomenon is more important than ever.
Vaccines vs. Microplastics: What Grabs Our Attention?
At the heart of this puzzle lies the human brain’s struggle to process risk in a world far more complex than the one it evolved to handle. Vaccines—especially the new mRNA types—have become lightning rods for anxiety about genetic manipulation. The idea of something “foreign” entering our bodies and tinkering with our DNA feels immediate and deeply personal. In contrast, the slow, invisible seep of microplastics into our bloodstreams, or the decades-long accumulation of pesticide residues, rarely stirs the same visceral reaction or media attention, even though the scientific evidence linking these substances to DNA damage is robust and growing (Costa and colleagues, 2021; Li and colleagues, 2023).
The Real Risks of Pesticides
Consider, for example, those who work with pesticides. Research shows that men who spray pesticides for a living are significantly more likely to experience erectile dysfunction and other reproductive health issues (Costa and colleagues, 2021). The suspected culprits? Hormone disruption, impaired sperm quality, and direct DNA damage. Yet, this research rarely makes headlines or sparks outrage. Most of us don’t think twice about the pesticides on our produce or the chemicals in our lawns, even though these exposures can have profound effects on intimacy, fertility, and the DNA we pass to future generations.
The Psychology Behind Vaccine Fear
Why do we ignore these well-documented dangers while focusing so intently on vaccines? One key psychological driver is “immediacy bias.” Our brains are wired to prioritise threats that feel direct, urgent, and within our control. Vaccination is a discrete event: a needle, a moment, a choice. It’s easy to imagine cause and effect—If I get this shot, something could happen to my DNA. Plastics and pesticides, on the other hand, are everywhere and nowhere. They slip quietly into our lives through water bottles, food packaging, and the very air we breathe. Their effects are statistical, not tangible. Researchers found that people systematically overestimate the risks of visible, acute threats (like injections) and underestimate chronic, diffuse dangers (Korteling and colleagues, 2023). This helps explain why someone might refuse a vaccine out of genetic fear, then drink from a plastic bottle without a second thought.
But immediacy isn’t the only force at play. The psychology of control is equally powerful. Vaccines present a clear, binary choice: take it or leave it. That choice feels empowering, even rebellious, especially in a culture that prizes autonomy. Plastics and pesticides, by contrast, are woven into the fabric of modern life. Avoiding them requires constant vigilance and, often, a sense of futility. It’s exhausting to imagine a world without plastic, and most of us have resigned ourselves to its omnipresence. This sense of helplessness dampens our emotional response, even as the evidence mounts that these substances can alter our genes and those of future generations (Burdon, 2022).
Layered atop these cognitive quirks is the seductive pull of conspiratorial thinking. Vaccines, especially when mandated or promoted by authorities, become fertile ground for narratives about hidden agendas and sinister plots. Big Pharma and government agencies make for easy villains. Plastics and pesticides, while produced by equally powerful corporations, lack the same narrative punch. Their harm is diffuse, their perpetrators faceless. One study found that people who mistrust institutions are far more likely to fixate on vaccine risks than on environmental toxins, even when presented with equivalent scientific evidence (Jolley and colleagues, 2025). Conspiracies offer a sense of order and agency in a chaotic world. They allow us to channel our anxieties into a single, tangible enemy.
Social identity also plays a starring role. Vaccine scepticism has become a badge of belonging for certain groups, complete with rituals (like seeking exemption forms), shared language, and a sense of embattled community. Environmental activism, by contrast, is often fragmented and lacks the same tribal cohesion. A recent study showed that people are three times more likely to adopt beliefs that reinforce their group identity, even when those beliefs contradict scientific consensus (Burdon, 2022). This helps explain why anti-vaccine sentiment can spread like wildfire through social networks, while concern about plastics and pesticides remains a slow burn.
Looking Ahead: Rethinking Our Approach to Hidden Risks
What does this mean for the future of intimacy and health? The DNA we pass on to future generations is shaped not just by our genes, but by the chemicals we allow into our lives. The intense focus on vaccine risks, while ignoring the far greater threats posed by environmental toxins, highlights a profound mismatch between what actually endangers our health and what we feel most afraid of—driven by emotion, social influence, and the stories we tell ourselves about safety and control.