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Justification of the COVID-19 vaccine distribution: Contested inclusiveness in essential resource allocation

Last registered on October 07, 2021

Pre-Trial

Trial Information

General Information

Title
Justification of the COVID-19 vaccine distribution: Contested inclusiveness in essential resource allocation
RCT ID
AEARCTR-0008105
Initial registration date
October 06, 2021

Initial registration date is when the trial was registered.

It corresponds to when the registration was submitted to the Registry to be reviewed for publication.

First published
October 07, 2021, 7:02 PM EDT

First published corresponds to when the trial was first made public on the Registry after being reviewed.

Locations

Region

Primary Investigator

Affiliation
The University of Tokyo

Other Primary Investigator(s)

PI Affiliation
The University of Tokyo
PI Affiliation
The University of Tokyo

Additional Trial Information

Status
In development
Start date
2021-11-01
End date
2021-11-14
Secondary IDs
Prior work
This trial does not extend or rely on any prior RCTs.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is a challenge to all global communities. To overcome it, successful cooperation is critical. At the same time, essential resources such as safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19 and intensive care units in hospitals are scarce resources. For a nation to survive, such scarce resources should be available to all residents, including foreigners. However, the competition of individuals for scarce resources might lead to deepened social divides. Whether a nation can distribute scarce resources in a manner considered optimal for society as a whole, overcoming the conflicts of individual interests, would be an informative measure of that nation's inclusiveness, an ability that affects its survival.

Our experiment is set amid the natural experimental environment of the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan. Japan's capacity for vaccine production is still tightly limited as emergent variants of COVID-19 might necessitate three or more doses of a vaccine. We investigate whether respondents want to allocate COVID-19 vaccines equally among residents of Japanese and foreigners with the same background characteristics, in accord with standards that the government has applied.

We employ a randomized conjoint design. Respondents are shown three hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine recipients, each with different background characteristics, including nationality and residency status. We then asked the respondents to place three potential recipients in order of priority allocation. We observe a marginal change in the preferred allocation of vaccines when nationality and/or residency status is changed.
External Link(s)

Registration Citation

Citation
Iida, Takashi, Keisuke Kawata and Masaki Nakabayashi. 2021. "Justification of the COVID-19 vaccine distribution: Contested inclusiveness in essential resource allocation." AEA RCT Registry. October 07. https://doi.org/10.1257/rct.8105-1.0
Experimental Details

Interventions

Intervention(s)
We adopt a factorial design as a randomized conjoint design. We employ 15,000 respondents in our internet-based experiment and task them with performing a randomized conjoint experiment. In each case, respondents are shown three hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine recipients with different background characteristics, including nationality and residency status. Among those hypothetical recipients, the Japanese nationality is fixed. We then observe whether and how a change in the nationality of a hypothetical recipient affects the respondent's selection of the person in relation to recipients with the same and different background characteristics.
Intervention (Hidden)
We adopt a factorial design as a randomized conjoint design.
(1) Attributes and levels of hypothetical recipients.
a) Occupation (Levels: health care worker; nursery and teacher; company employee; self-employed; out of work).
b) Nationality (Levels: Japanese; US; China; Taiwan; South Korea; EU).
c) Residency status (Levels: Japanese national; short-term stay visa (for tourism and business); work visa (education, research, medical services, nursing care, intracompany transferee, permanent resident, illegal stay)).
d) Age (Levels: 17 to 30; 31 to 45; 46 to 64; 65 or over).
e) Whether living with child(ren) 5 and under (Levels: Yes; No)
f) Living with parents (-in-law) 65 or over (Levels: Yes, No)
g) Years of stay (Level: same as age; less than 1 year; 1 to 5 years; 6 to 10 years; 10 years or longer).

(2) Control and treatment.
Our control group is "Japanese national" with 5 (a) X 1 (b) X 1 (c) X 4 (d) X 2 (e) X 2 (f) = 80 attributes and level combinaions. We thus have 5 (a) X 5 (b) X 5 (c) X 4 (d) X 2 (e) X 2 (f) = 2000 treatment combinations for US, China, Taiwan, South Korea, and EU citizens.

(3) Choice task.
Each choice task include three hypothetical vaccine recipients as follows.
(a) Japanese national.
(b) A foreign national.
(c) Another foreign national (not (b)).
Profiles of the above three hypothetical recipients are shown to each respondent and the respondent is asked to order the three in terms of priority. We assign 5 choice tasks to each respondent.
Intervention Start Date
2021-11-01
Intervention End Date
2021-11-14

Primary Outcomes

Primary Outcomes (end points)
The outcome of the greatest interest is whether foreign nationality affects respondents' preferences regarding hypothetical vaccine recipients, and, if so, whether the difference in preferences between foreign nationality and own nationality is correlated with geopolitical tension with the home country. If respondents are perfectly rational in their wish to build herd immunity, there should be no discrimination regarding nationality and geopolitical tension with the home country. If there is discrimination on those grounds, this can be a measure of the degree of ethnic and geopolitical distortion shared by Japanese adults facing the pandemic challenges.
Primary Outcomes (explanation)

Secondary Outcomes

Secondary Outcomes (end points)
Secondary Outcomes (explanation)

Experimental Design

Experimental Design
We implement a randomized conjoint experiment using 15,000 randomly selected Japanese adult respondents. We assign each respondent 5 tasks; in each, they are asked to place three hypothetical vaccine recipients (whose occupation, age, residency status, family composition, and nationality are randomly combined except that one of the three choices is always Japanese) in order of priority. Responses to Japanese recipients are our control group, and responses to the other recipients are our treatment group.

We collect information about the background characteristics of the 15,000 respondents such as gender, age, prefecture, work status, political preferences, partisanship, income, household income, education, whether reading a newspaper, Internet news, or books, and self-perception of social class. Using a generalized random forest algorithm, we look at whether the effects of the intervention differed based on the background characteristics of the respondents.
Experimental Design Details
Randomization Method
We implement a randomized conjoint experiment. Randomization is performed by a computer of the survey company with which we contract.
Randomization Unit
Individual.
Was the treatment clustered?
No

Experiment Characteristics

Sample size: planned number of clusters
15,000 individuals.
Sample size: planned number of observations
15,000 individuals.
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
(15,000 individuals) X (5 choice tasks) X (3 ordered preferences)
Minimum detectable effect size for main outcomes (accounting for sample design and clustering)
IRB

Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

IRB Name
Ethical Review Board, Institute of Social Science, The University of Tokyo.
IRB Approval Date
2021-07-21
IRB Approval Number
21-4

Post-Trial

Post Trial Information

Study Withdrawal

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Intervention

Is the intervention completed?
No
Data Collection Complete
Data Publication

Data Publication

Is public data available?
No

Program Files

Program Files
Reports, Papers & Other Materials

Relevant Paper(s)

Reports & Other Materials