| Literature DB >> 32574184 |
Holly Seale1, Anita E Heywood1, Julie Leask2,3, Meru Sheel4, Susan Thomas5, David N Durrheim5, Katarzyna Bolsewicz5, Rajneesh Kaur2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the emergence of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in late 2019, communities have been required to rapidly adopt community mitigation strategies rarely used before, or only in limited settings. This study aimed to examine the attitudes and beliefs of Australian adults towards the COVID-19 pandemic, and willingness and capacity to engage with these mitigation measures. In addition, we aimed to explore the psychosocial and demographic factors that are associated with adoption of recommended hygiene-related and avoidance-related behaviors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32574184 PMCID: PMC7310732 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0235112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Adoption of hygiene-related and avoidance-related behaviors.in response to COVID-19.
| Increased the time I spent cleaning or disinfecting things I might touch, such as door knobs | 537/1420 (37·8) | 0.740 |
| Washed my hands with soap and water more often than usual | 1088/1420 (76·6) | 0.763 |
| Used alcoholic hand gel or hand sanitizer more than usual | 806/1420 (56·8) | 0.807 |
| Deliberately cancelled or postponed a social event | 519/1161 | 0.814 |
| Cancelled or delayed travelling overseas | 407/811 | 0.745 |
| Reduced my use of public transport | 448/880 | 0.816 |
| Kept away from crowded places generally | 889/1332 | 0.778 |
| Performed ≥ 1 of three recommended behaviors | 1205/1420 (84·9) | |
| Performed ≥1 of six avoidance behaviors | 1326/1420 (93·4) |
*Total number of participants lower than overall total of 1420 due to exclusion of participants who ticked ‘not applicable’ options. # 587 participants had children of school or childcare going age.
Fig 1Rating of level of effectiveness of strategies to control Covid-19 outbreak.
Association between demographic characteristics and adoption of preventive/avoidance strategies during COVID-19 pandemic.
| Variable | No (%) of participants | No (%) using ≥hygiene behaviors | Odds ratio (95% CI) | No (%) using ≥avoidance behavior | Odds ratio (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||||
| Women | 740 (52·1) | 646 (87·3) | 1·5 (1·1–2·1) | 707 (95·5) | 0.7(0.5–1) |
| Men | 678 (47·7) | 559 (82·4) | Ref | 618 (91·2) | Ref |
| Other | 2 (0·1) | 0 (0) | - | 1 (50) | - |
| Age group | |||||
| 18–49 | 803 (56·5) | 685 (85·3) | Ref | 739 (92) | Ref |
| ≥ 50 | 617 (43·5) | 520 (84·3) | 0·9 (0·7–1·2) | 587 (95·1) | 1·0 (0.7–1.6) |
| Aboriginal and/or Torres | |||||
| Strait Islander | |||||
| Yes | 47 (3·3) | 40 (85·1) | 1.0 (0·5–2.2) | 42 (89·4) | 0.8 (0·3–2.1) |
| No | 1373 (96·7) | 1165 (84·9) | Ref | 1284 (93·5) | Ref |
| Country of birth | |||||
| Australia | 1096 (77·2) | 919 (83·9) | Ref | 1011 (92·2) | Ref |
| Other | 324 (22·8) | 286 (88·3) | 0·7 (0·5–1·0) | 315 (97·2) | 3.1 (1·7–6·0) |
| Working status | |||||
| Not working | 591 (41·6) | 497 (84·1) | 1·2 (0·9–1·6) | 567 (95·9) | 0.7 (0.5–1.2) |
| Working full/part time | 829 (58·4) | 708 (85·4) | Ref | 759 (91·6) | Ref |
| Educational attainment | 30 (2·1) | ||||
| None | 131 | 27 (90) | Ref | 28 (93·3) | Ref |
| School certificate (year 10) | (9·2)235 | 108 (92·4) | 0·5 (0·2–1·9) | 119 (90·8) | 0·7 (0·2–2.7) |
| Leaving certificate (year 12) | (16·5) | 197 (83·8) | 0·6 (0·2–2·1) | 219 (93·2) | 1·2 (0·3–4·3) |
| Trade/apprenticeship/cert | 483 (34) | 405 (83·9) | 0·6 (0·2–2.0) | 449 (93) | 0·9 (0·3–3·1) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 379 (26·7) | 328 (86·5) | 0·8 (0·2–2·7) | 359(94·7) | 2.0 (0·6–6.7) |
| Masters or higher | 162 (11·4) | 140 (86·4) | 0·8 (0·2–2·7) | 152(93·8) | 2.6 (0·7–9.4) |
| Children in household | |||||
| Attending childcare/school | 212 (14·9) | 184 (86·6) | 1.2 (0·8–1·9) | 195 (92) | 1.4 (0·8–2.5) |
| Not attending childcare/school or no children | 1208 (85·1) | 1021 (84·5) | Ref | 1131(93·6) | Ref |
| Travelled overseas in 2020 | 222 (15·6) | 201 (90·5) | 1.9(1·2–3.1) | 206 (92·8) | 2.3 (1.4–3.9 |
| No | 1198 (84·4) | 1004(83·8) | Ref | 1120 (93·5) | Ref |
| Have private health | 830 (58·5) | 712(85·.8) | 1.2(0·9–1·7) | (93) | 1.2 (0·8–1·9) |
| Insurance | |||||
| No | 590 (41·5) | 493(83·6) | Ref | 554 (93·9) | Ref |
| Health rating | |||||
| Very good/good | 1009 (71·1) | 861 (8)6·9 | Ref | 945 (93·7) | Ref |
| Moderate | 294 (20·7) | 241 (82) | 0·6 (0·4–1.1) | 271 (92·2) | 1·1 (0·5–2·7) |
| Poor/very poor | 117 (8·2) | 95 (81.2) | 0·7 (0.5–1.0) | 110 (94) | 0·8 (0·5–1·3) |
| Chronic health condition | |||||
| Present | 363 (25·6) | 317 (87·3) | 1.5(0·7–3.3) | 345 (95) | 1·2 (0·4–3.2) |
| None | 1057 (74·4) | 888 (84) | Ref | 981(92·8) | Ref |
*P<0·05
# Not included in OR calculations.
Logistic regression models testing association between perception variables and adoption of hygiene/avoidance strategies during COVID-19 outbreak.
| Association with carrying or ≥1 preventive behavior | Association with carrying out ≥1 avoidance behavior | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variables | No. (%) | OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
| Trust in government/authorities | |||||
| High | 1315/1401 (93·9) | 4.2 (2·6–6·7) | 2·7 (1·4–5.1) | 5.8 (3.2–10.7) | 6·0 (2.6–11.0) |
| Low | 86/1401 (6.1) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Perceived Severity | |||||
| High | 1219/1400 (85·8) | 2·6 (1·8–3·7) | 1·4 (1·1–2·3) | 2·0 (1·2–3·3) | 1·5 (0·7–3.2) |
| Low | 181/1400 (12.7) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Rating of level of effectiveness of behaviors~ | |||||
| High | 1150 (81) | 8.8 (5.0–15.5) | 3·2 (1.4–7.2) | 14.3 (6.0–24.3) | 4·0 (1.88.7) |
| Low | 270 (19) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Ability to adopt social distancing strategies | |||||
| High | 740/1293 (52.1) | 5.7 (3.2–10.4) | 3.6 (1.6–7.0) | 15.7 (8.625·8) | 5.0 (1.5–9.3) |
| Low | 553/1293 (38.9) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Level of concern if self-isolated€ | |||||
| High | 274/1359 (19·3) | 1.4 (1·1–2.0) | 2·4 (1·1–4·0) | 1·5 (0·8–2·9 | 1·8 (1.1–3·0) |
| Low | 1085/1359 (76.4) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Level of Risk | |||||
| Very low/low | 553/1320 (41·9) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Intermediate | 496 /1320 (37·6) | 2·0 (1·4–2·8) | 1·6 (1·1–2·0) | 1·5 (1.0–2·4) | 1.1 (0·6–1·7) |
| Very high/high | 271/1320 (20·5) | 3·1 (1·9–4·9) | 2·0 (1·2–3·5) | 3.0 (1·7–5.4) | 1·7 (0·8–3.4) |
| Impact on health | |||||
| No/somewhat | 806/1304 (61·8) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Serious/Extreme | 498/1304 (38·2) | 1·6 (1·2–2·3) | 1·0 (0·6–1·5) | 3.2 (2.0–5.2) | 1·6 (0·9–2.9) |
*P<0.05, Two logistic regression models: Model one: Hygiene related behaviour as the outcome, model adjusted for gender, country of birth, travelled overseas, private health insurance, rating of current health and worry, variables with P<0.25 in the univariate analysis. Model two: avoidance behaviours as the outcome, model adjusted for gender, country of birth, employment, ATSI status, travelled overseas, children attending childcare/school or not, and worry, variables with P<0.25.