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Online dating for anti-vaxxers: seeking chemistry but shunning science

The Covid-19 pandemic may have receded, but dating apps, websites and social media groups still offer to unite vaccine-hating singles.

Online dating apps show anti-vaccine sentiment has become an entrenched identity for many who wilfully resist or ignore scientific assertions that inoculations saved tens of millions of lives.
Online dating apps show anti-vaccine sentiment has become an entrenched identity for many who wilfully resist or ignore scientific assertions that inoculations saved tens of millions of lives.

In a private dating group on Facebook, Renee flaunts herself to like-minded singles as a fit, adventurous Kizomba dancer who at 35 exudes “inner-child vibes”. But her main draw? She is unvaccinated.

The Covid-19 pandemic may have receded, but dating apps, websites and social media groups still offer to unite vaccine-hating singles who believe debunked falsehoods such as that corona­virus jabs alter DNA or cause ­infertility.

The trend underscores how anti-vaccine sentiment has become an entrenched identity for many who wilfully resist or ignore scientific assertions that inoculations saved tens of millions of lives globally when the pandemic was raging.

A prospective match’s vaccination status determines compatibility not just for Renee, a self-employed Australian, but for many posting in “unvaxed singles” groups that have cropped up on Facebook.

Dating decisions there are ­driven by chemistry but not ­science. In one group, many listed “no jabbies” as their top dating criteria, while others cheered anti-vaccine advocates as “pure blood freedom fighters”. One meme popular in the group described their ideal partner: “She’s curvy, funny, intelligent, unvaccinated.”

It demonstrates how the pandemic turned rejecting vaccines from a personal health decision to the way “people express their personal brand”, said Timothy Caulfield, a professor at the University of Alberta in Canada.

“It shows how high the walls of their echo chambers are. Being anti-vaccine has become an ideological flag – a way to demonstrate which team you belong to,” Professor Caulfield said.

“It is less and less about science and more and more about the ­values being anti-vax signal.”

According to a 2022 survey by the Pew Research Centre, about half of US adults who used a dating site or app said it was important to see the vaccination status on profiles.

“I’ve even seen it listed as a ­dealbreaker on some profiles,” said a post in a dating discussion group on the online messaging board Reddit. “The profiles I see most state the following: ‘If you’re vaccinated then please swipe left’.”

Some comments in the group referred to vaccinated singles as people carrying “biological weapons”, an apparent reference to the debunked claim the vaccinated spread “super strain” variants.

Vaccine falsehoods often overlap with other types of misinformation, introducing believers to those espousing the QAnon conspiracy theory and anti-LGBTQ narratives.

“Studies have consistently shown that if a person is anti-­vaccine – or unvaccinated – you can make a strong guess about that person’s positions on a host of other issues,” Professor Caulfield said.

Spreading falsehoods can also be profitable.

The Florida-based Wellness Company sells a detoxification supplement that it claims counteracts the harmful effects of coronavirus jabs, destroying spike proteins to get back “that pre-Covid feeling”.

The same company also backs a dating website for unvaccinated people called Unjected. Before being accepted, its members are required to have their “vaccination status certified by a medical professional”.

In 2021, US media reported the Unjected app, dubbed as the ­“Tinder for anti-vaxxers”, was ­removed from Apple’s App Store over Covid-19 misinformation.

A slew of similar apps for unvaccinated singles are available on the Google Play Store. One such platform is called Unjabbed, whose user reviews expressed ­concern about bugs and phone hacking attempts after the app was downloaded.

The allure of finding an unvaccinated partner is reinforced by false social media posts sharing unfounded fears that vaccines can be “shed” or passed onto people through body fluids, threatening fertility.

“The only real utility a dating platform like this could have is finding a partner that aligns with your ‘medical freedom’ views,” Katrine Wallace, an epidemiologist and assistant professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, said.

“There is no clinical reason to do so.”

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/online-dating-for-antivaxxers-seeking-chemistry-but-shunning-science/news-story/a0675203a7833a5c7010c4c729ebfdb2