The role of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism on mask wearing and vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic

Curr Psychol. 2022 Apr 14:1-11. doi: 10.1007/s12144-022-03080-4. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

In a large nationally representative study in the United States, we explored the role of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism on adhering to protective measures against COVID-19. Controlling for one's politics, perception of risk, state policies, and important demographics, we find higher grandiose narcissism predicts less vaccination and less mask-wearing, but more telling other people to wear a mask, if one wears a mask. The individual facets of higher entitlement/exploitativeness predicted less mask-wearing and less vaccination while higher authority/leadership-seeking predicted telling others to wear a mask, but not getting vaccinated. Regarding vulnerable narcissism, higher self-centered/egocentrism predicted less mask-wearing or vaccination, while higher oversensitivity-to-judgement predicted more mask-wearing and vaccination. Our results are consistent with expectations that reflect narcissism's multidimensionality, and present a nuanced picture of narcissism's role in adhering to protective policies.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12144-022-03080-4.

Keywords: Covid-19; Grandiose; HSNS; NPI; Narcissism; Public goods; Vulnerable.