Narcissism affects whether people follow COVID mitigation efforts

People display signs protesting mask and vaccine mandates during the Kentucky Freedom Rally at the capitol building on August 28, 2021 in Frankfort, Kentucky (Credit: Jon Cherry/Getty Images)

New research indicates a person’s individual level of narcissism affects whether they are more, or less, willing to participate in COVID-19 mitigation strategies like masking and vaccination.

The researchers—including Peter Hatemi, professor of political science at Penn State—looked at the effects of both “grandiose” and “vulnerable” narcissism on whether people were more or less likely to wear a mask in public or get vaccinated against COVID-19.

Hatemi explains that grandiose narcissism is characterized by the pursuit of social status and a desire for others to see them as important and worthy of admiration. Meanwhile, vulnerable narcissism is associated with selfishness and ego-centrism or being especially sensitive to judgment from others.

After controlling for personal politics, perception of risk, state policies, and other important demographics, the researchers found that participants higher in grandiose narcissism were less likely to wear a mask or get vaccinated. However, in individuals who did choose to wear a mask, they were also more likely to tell others to wear one, as well.

Participants higher in vulnerable narcissism were also less likely to wear a mask or get vaccinated if their personalities were also more self-centered and egocentric. However, they were more likely to participate in these mitigations if their personalities also made them more sensitive to feeling judged.

The researchers say the findings could be used to help shape messaging in the future.

“If you want to convince someone high in grandiose narcissism to wear a mask or participate in other mitigations, make that mitigation cool and unique to fulfill their need to stand out,” Hatemi says.

“For those over sensitive to judgment, you could tell them the mitigation is socially sanctioned. Both of these strategies seem to tap into these personalities more than emphasizing the greater good, for example.”

According to the researchers, opinions about the COVID-19 pandemic and the mitigation efforts intended to slow its progress have been greatly divided in the United States. Previous research found that conservatives were less likely to feel vulnerable to COVID-19 or that the virus was a serious threat, and more likely to believe the media was exaggerating the danger and impact of the virus.

However, the researchers suspected that politics alone could not explain people’s behaviors and opinions about the pandemic and that personality may play a role, as well.

“In a time when people were being encouraged to wear a mask or get vaccinated to help not just themselves but also other people, there was one personality trait that stuck out to us as a possible explanation for those that didn’t want to comply,” Hatemi says. “My coauthor and I had been researching narcissism in other capacities for quite some time and it seemed like it could be strongly linked to these types of behaviors.”

For the study, the researchers collected information from a nationally representative sample of 1,100 US adults in March 2021. They asked participants several questions about COVID-19 mask-wearing, as well as vaccine behaviors and attitudes. Participants also filled out assessments designed to measure levels of narcissism in their personality. Finally, participants were asked about how worried they personally felt about COVID-19.

The researchers say that while extreme narcissism can be a diagnosable personality disorder, narcissism to a milder degree is also an aspect of everyone’s personality that exists on a continuum.

“We all have some level of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism,” Hatemi says. “It’s a natural part of all humans’ personalities because without it, we wouldn’t function properly.

“But this part of narcissism we all have, it can get easily fed by political messaging and hijacked into these different stories, which is what we saw during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The research appears in the journal Current Psychology.

Zoltán Fazekas of the Copenhagen Business School, also participated in this work.

Source: Penn State