| Literature DB >> 33081833 |
Moran Bodas1,2, Kobi Peleg3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The outbreak of a new Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) poses dramatic challenges to public health authorities worldwide. One measure put in place to contain the spread of the disease is self-quarantine of individuals who may have been exposed to the disease. While officials expect the public to comply with such regulation, studies suggest that a major obstacle to compliance for self-quarantine is concern over loss of income or employment due to the prolonged absence from work.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; COVID-19; Cohort; Compensation; Compliance; Self-quarantine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33081833 PMCID: PMC7573868 DOI: 10.1186/s13584-020-00418-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Isr J Health Policy Res ISSN: 2045-4015
Socio-demographic distribution (n (%)) of studied samples (Feb. and Mar. 2020)a
| Variable | Feb. 2020 | Mar. 2020 |
|---|---|---|
| Female | 284 (50.4%) | 262 (51.3%) |
| Male | 279 (49.6%) | 249 (48.7%) |
| Average ± SD | 39.57 ± 14.09 | 39.28 ± 14.24 |
| 18–35 | 258 (45.8%) | 239 (46.8%) |
| 36–55 | 213 (37.8%) | 195 (38.2%) |
| 56–70 | 86 (16.4%) | 77 (15.1%) |
| Jewish | 456 (81.0%) | 407 (79.6%) |
| Otherb | 107 (19.0%) | 104 (20.4%) |
| Secular | 290 (63.6%) | 267 (65.6%) |
| Traditional | 58 (12.7%) | 52 (12.8%) |
| Religious | 59 (12.9%) | 51 (12.5%) |
| Ultra-Orthodox | 49 (10.8%) | 37 (9.1%) |
| Haifa & North | 199 (35.3%) | 182 (35.6%) |
| Tel-Aviv & Center | 153 (27.2%) | 143 (28.0%) |
| South & Coastline Plain | 120 (21.3%) | 102 (20.0%) |
| Greater Jerusalem | 49 (8.7%) | 46 (9.0%) |
| HaSharon Region | 42 (7.5%) | 38 (7.4%) |
| Israel | 487 (86.4%) | 464 (90.8%) |
| Outside Israel | 76 (13.6%) | 47 (9.2%) |
| Coupled | 414 (73.5%) | 359 (70.3%) |
| Single | 149 (26.5%) | 152 (29.7%) |
| Yes | 382 (67.9%) | 304 (59.5%) |
| └ < 18 years | 320 (83.8%) | 261 (85.9%) |
| No | 181 (32.1%) | 207 (40.5%) |
| Average ± SD | 3.94 ± 1.78 | 3.94 ± 1.78 |
| 1–2 members | 137 (24.3%) | 137 (24.3%) |
| 3–5 members | 337 (59.9%) | 337 (59.9%) |
| 6+ members | 89 (15.8%) | 89 (15.8%) |
| < K-12 | 95 (16.9%) | 84 (16.6%) |
| K-12 diploma | 110 (19.5%) | 113 (22.1%) |
| Vocational | 140 (24.9%) | 111 (21.7%) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 166 (29.5%) | 146 (28.6%) |
| Master’s or above | 52 (9.2%) | 57 (11.2%) |
| Below average | 230 (40.8%) | 221 (43.3%) |
| Average | 117 (20.8%) | 98 (19.3%) |
| Above average | 162 (28.8%) | 130 (25.4%) |
| Missing | 54 (9.6%) | 61 (12.0%) |
| Part/fulltime employed | 371 (65.9%) | 332 (65.0%) |
| Student | 71 (12.6%) | 71 (13.9%) |
| Unemployed | 42 (7.5%) | 37 (7.2%) |
| Self-employed | 40 (7.1%) | 34 (6.6%) |
| Retired | 29 (5.2%) | 33 (6.5%) |
| Missing | 10 (1.8%) | 4 (0.8%) |
| Were | – | 44 (8.6%) |
| Currently are | – | 52 (10.2%) |
a Samples are mutually exclusive (respondents in the first round were excluded from participating in the second round)
b Includes: Muslims, Christians, and Druze
c Relevant to the Jewish portion of the sample only
d Relevant only to the March 2020 sample
Distribution of responders’ attitudes (the top two options from a 5-point Likert scale) toward COVID-19 outbreak issues in the two rounds
| % of top options | % change | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| February 2020 ( | March 2020 ( | ||
| To what extent do you follow the news reports about the COVID-19 outbreak? | 61.4% | 76.5% | + 15.1% |
| To what extent are you worried by the COVID-19 outbreak? | 49.9% | 66.6% | + 16.7% |
| To what extent do you think the public is reacting in panic to the COVID-19 outbreak? | 62.8% | 67.3% | + 4.5% |
| To what extent do you think the media is contributing to public concerns over COVID-19? | 80.8% | 79.8% | −1.0% |
| To what extent do you trust the public health instruction of the Ministry of Health during the COVID-19 outbreak? | 52.8% | 74.5% | + 21.7% |
| To what extent do you think taking criminal action against individuals violating quarantine decree will increase compliance with MOH instructions? | 69.2% | 78.7% | + 9.5% |
Fig. 1Change in mean score of attitudes toward the COVID-19 outbreak between the two rounds (N = 563 and N = 511 in February & March 2020, respectively). Mean score is computed from a range of 1 (“Not at all”) to a maximal score of 5 (“very much”). All changes are statistically significant at the p < .001 level. The items presented refer to the extent to which a respondent reported: (a) watching the news (“News consumption”), (b) being worried about COVID-19 (“Worry”), (c) an elevated sense of public panic (“Public panic”), and (d) trust in the regulations published by the Ministry of Health (“Trust in MOH”)
Spearman correlations (R) between COVID-19 attitudinal components among both samples (Feb. 2020 & Mar. 2020) (N = 1074)
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. News consumption | ||||
| 2. Worry | 0.505*** | |||
| 3. Public panic perception | 0.099** | 0.140*** | ||
| 4. Media contribution to public panic | 0.113*** | 0.086* | 0.345*** | |
| 5. Trust in the Ministry of Health | 0.219*** | 0.197*** | 0.069 | 0.028 |
*** p-value <.001 level ** p-value = .001 *p-value <.01 level
Fig. 2Distribution of expected rates of compliance with self-quarantine during the COVID-19 outbreak in Israel, according to whether monetary compensation for lost wages is assumed or not
Adjusted and unadjusted odds-ratio of intent to comply with self-isolation without compensation for lost wages according to correlated threat perception and socio-demographic variables (N = 1074)
| Variable | Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | |
| Round (Feb vs. March) | 1.898 | (1.472, 2.448)+++ | 1.544 | (1.174, 2.032)++ |
| Age | 1.014 | (1.005, 1.024)++ | 1.019 | (1.010, 1.029)+++ |
| Gender | 0.739 | (0.575, 0.948)+ | 0.838 | (0.641, 1.096) |
| Place of birth | 1.671 | (1.145, 2.440)++ | 1.408 | (0.944, 2.100) |
| Religion | 0.423 | (0.297, 0.602)+++ | 0.478 | (0.327, 0.699)+++ |
| News consumption | 1.396 | (1.228, 1.587)+++ | 1.071 | (0.918, 1.250) |
| Worry over COVID-19 | 1.505 | (1.330, 1.702)+++ | 1.260 | (1.093, 1.474)++ |
| Trust in MOH | 1.428 | (1.259, 1.620)+++ | 1.260 | (1.100, 1.444)++ |
OR Odds Ratio, CI Confidence Interval, MOH Ministry of Health
a Only variables found to correlate with the respective dependent variable are shown. The categorization of the independent variables are as follows: Round: February 2020–1, March 2020–2; Age: continuous; Gender: Female – 0, Male – 1; Place of birth: 0 – outside Israel, 1 – Israel; Religion: 0 – Non-Jewish, 1 – Jewish; News consumption, Worry over COVID-19, and Trust in MOH – ordinal from 1 (“not at all”) to 5 (“very much”)
+ p < 0.05 ++ p < 0.01 +++ p < 0.001