| Literature DB >> 33859584 |
Ekaterini Georgiadou1, Anne Koopmann2,3, Astrid Müller4, Tagrid Leménager2,3, Thomas Hillemacher1,5, Falk Kiefer2,3.
Abstract
Background: During the lockdown, governmental restrictions resulted in changes to the day-to-day routines of many individuals. Some people appear to cope with stress by panic buying in an attempt to stockpile specific goods, resulting in empty supermarket shelves. Moreover, e-commerce experienced significant growth during this period. We aimed to investigate potential changes in shopping frequencies and preferred shopping type (offline/online) and their relationship with pandemic-specific anxiety and stress during the 2020 spring lockdown in Germany.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Germany; buying-shopping disorder; lockdown 2020; panic buying
Year: 2021 PMID: 33859584 PMCID: PMC8042165 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.650989
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 5.435
Sociodemographic description of the total sample and group differences.
| Female | 387 (68.1) | 623 (57.1) | 990 (67.7) | X2 = 38.15 | 2,000 (64.1) |
| Male | 178 (31.3) | 467 (42.8) | 469 (32.1) | 1,114 (35.7) | |
| Other | 3 (0.5) | 2 (0.2) | 3 (0.2) | 8 (0.3) | |
| 18–24 years old | 85 (15.0) | 131 (12.0) | 156 (10.7) | X2 = 56.05df = 10 | 372 (11.9) |
| 25–34 years old | 188 (33.1) | 302 (27.7) | 363 (24.8) | 853 (27.3) | |
| 35–44 years old | 132 (23.2) | 232 (21.2) | 303 (20.7) | 667 (21.4) | |
| 45–54 years old | 100 (17.6) | 192 (17.6) | 314 (21.5) | 606 (19.4) | |
| 55–64 years old | 50 (8.8) | 167 (15.3) | 255 (17.4) | 472 (15.1) | |
| >65 years old | 13 (2.3) | 68 (6.2) | 71 (4.9) | 152 (4.9) | |
| Alone | 152 (26.8) | 279 (25.6) | 335 (23.1) | X2 = 21.07 df = 10 | 766 (24.6) |
| With partner | 178 (31.4) | 410 (37.6) | 487 (33.5) | 1,075 (34.6) | |
| With children | 30 (5.3) | 40 (3.7) | 60 (4.1) | 130 (4.2) | |
| With partner and children | 117 (20.6) | 216 (19.8) | 344 (23.7) | 677 (21.8) | |
| With parents | 44 (7.8) | 68 (6.2) | 89 (6.1) | 201 (6.5) | |
| Other forms | 46 (8.1) | 77 (7.1) | 137 (9.4) | 260 (8.4) | |
| <11 years | 193 (34.2) | 375 (34.7) | 389 (26.8) | X2 = 31.24 df = 4 | 957 (30.9) |
| 11 < x ≤ 13 years | 144 (25.5) | 254 (23.5) | 328 (22.6) | 726 (23.4) | |
| >13 years | 227 (40.2) | 453 (41.9) | 735 (50.6) | 1,415 (45.7) | |
| Yes | 231 (41.9) | 447 (42.0) | 595 (41.6) | X2 = 0.04 df = 2 | 1,273 (41.8) |
| No | 320 (58.1) | 618 (58.0) | 836 (58.4) | 1,774 (58.2) | |
| Full-time | 297 (52.4) | 593 (54.4) | 762 (52.2) | X2 = 13.52 df = 8 | 1,652 (53.0) |
| Part-time | 134 (23.6) | 226 (20.7) | 353 (24.2) | 713 (22.9) | |
| School/university/in training | 74 (13.1) | 121 (11.1) | 153 (10.5) | 348 (11.2) | |
| Not working | 48 (8.5) | 130 (11.9) | 149 (10.2) | 327 (10.5) | |
| Other | 14(2.5) | 21 (1.9) | 43 (2.9) | 78 (2.5) | |
| Yes | 264 (54.2) | 426 (44.0) | 578 (44.3) | X2 = 16.42 df = 2 | 1,268 (45.9) |
| No | 223 (45.8) | 543 (56.0) | 728 (55.7) | 1,494 (54.1) | |
Sums of individual items may not be equal to totals due to rounding.
Fisher exact test.
E.g., work in the waste management industry or a hospital or a supermarket
Incl. Retired, Unemployed, Homemaker.
Significant after Bonferroni–Holm correction.
Bold values indicate significant difference.
Values with different superscripts are significantly different (post-hoc tests).
Feelings and opinions regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and shopping-specific variables.
| Do you agree that the corona crisis will be managed successfully in Germany? ( | 2.94 (0.89) | 3.05 (0.81) | 3.09 (0.79) | 3.01 (0.83) | |
| In your opinion, are the restrictions important for the successful control of the corona virus? ( | 3.35 (0.94) | 3.50 (0.80) | 3.51 (0.80) | 3.42 (0.87) | |
| In your opinion, how many weeks will the lockdown continue in its current form? ( | 7.30 (8.81) | 6.82 (8.37) | 6.40 (7.79) | 6.82 (8.38) | |
| Are you afraid for your health or the health of those close to you? ( | 6.61 (2.81) | 6.03 (2.70) | 6.07 (2.76) | 6.13 (2.80) | |
| Do you feel stressed by the restrictions? ( | 6.32 (3.23) | 4.91 (3.28) | 5.15 (3.13) | 5.42 (3.29) | |
| Preferred shopping before lockdown | |||||
| Predominantly online | 59 (10.4) | 101 (9.2) | 95 (6.5) | χ2 = 34.98 df = 4 | 255 (8.2) |
| Predominantly offline | 261 (46.0) | 535 (49.0) | 847 (57.9) | 1,643 (52.6) | |
| Both equally, online and offline | 248 (43.7) | 456 (41.8) | 520 (35.6) | Cramer V = 0.08 | 1,244 (39.2) |
| Preferred shopping during lockdown | |||||
| Predominantly online | 322 (56.7) | 346 (31.7)c; −1.3 | 393 (26.9) | χ2 = 185.73 df = 4 | 1,061 (34.0) |
| Predominantly offline | 107 (18.8) | 392 (35.9)c; −0.2 | 635 (43.4) | 1,134 (36.3) | |
| Both equally, online and offline | 139 (24.5) | 354 (32.4) | 434 (29.7) | Cramer V = 0.17 | 927 (29.7) |
| Have you or someone among your family and friends or a doctor been worried about your shopping behavior or suggested that you should shop less? | |||||
| No concerns | 517 (91.0) | 1074 (98.4)c; 0.8 | 1409 (96.4) | χ2 = 81.20* df = 6 | 3,000 (96.1) |
| Yes, before the lockdown | 10 (1.8) | 7 (0.6) | 37 (2.5) | 54 (1.7) | |
| Yes, during the lockdown | 20 (3.5) | 1 (0.1) | 8 (0.5) | Cramer V = 0.13 | 29 (0.9) |
| Yes, before and during the lockdown | 21 (3.7) | 10 (0.9) | 8 (0.5) | 39 (1.2) | |
Significant after Bonferroni–Holm correction. Bold values indicate significant difference.
Values with different superscripts are significantly different (post-hoc tests).
Distribution of preferred shopping before and during the lockdown (N = 3,122).
| Predominantly online | 228 (7.3%) | 13 (0.4%) | 14 (0.4%) | 255 (8.2%) |
| Predominantly offline | 264 (8.5%) | 1,029 (33.0%) | 350 (11.2%) | 1,643 (52.6%) |
| Both equal, online, and offline | 569 (18.3%) | 92 (2.9%) | 563 (18.0%) | 1,224 (39.2%) |
| Total | 1,061 (34.0%) | 1,134 (36.3%) | 927 (29.7%) | 3,122 (100%) |
Sums of individual items may not be equal to totals due to rounding.
Figure 1Preferred shopping products of the participants who shopped more after the beginning of the lockdown (n = 568). Multiple choice option.