| Literature DB >> 33896552 |
Melissa DeJonckheere1, Marika Waselewski1, Xochitl Amaro2, Abby Frank3, Kao-Ping Chua4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Little is known about the views of U.S. youth on COVID-19 or their use of face coverings. Closing this gap could facilitate messaging to promote COVID-19 risk mitigation behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; COVID-19; Young adults
Year: 2021 PMID: 33896552 PMCID: PMC8061118 DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.02.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adolesc Health ISSN: 1054-139X Impact factor: 5.012
Themes and representative quotes regarding perceived risk of contracting COVID-19 in the next few months (n = 791 participants)
| Category | Themes | Quote | Participant characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Likely or somewhat likely/depends (n = 422, 53.4%) | Risk of contracting COVID-19 at school or college (n = 138, 32.7%) | I am going back to college dorming and I fear that the school won't be able to control it | 19, female, Asian, Northeast |
| I think I might, because I'm going back to school at a university with a large out of state population | 19, male, white, Midwest | ||
| Risk of contracting COVID-19 at work (n = 88, 20.9%) | Most likely, I work… as a housekeeper and have been working through the whole pandemic | 21, nonbinary, American Indian, West | |
| I work in a restaurant drive thru and I'll be getting a second job as a server in September. People aren't very considerate and won't stay home when they're sick or they don't wear masks when they're not eating | 19, female, American Indian/Hispanic, Northeast | ||
| Inadequate precautions (n = 88, 20.9%) | Restrictions are becoming less strict and people are starting to ignore social distancing | 24, male, white, Northeast | |
| I want to be hopeful that it'll get better, that at the same time I don’t think it will. Not enough people are wearing masks and they keep going out in public, so the virus is just too spread and will take a long time to recover from | 16, female, Asian, West | ||
| Unlikely (n = 363, 45.9%) | Taking precautions (n = 259, 71.3%) | I definitely don't think I'll get COVID. I'm really careful, I wear my mask, and I limit my social exposure heavily. | 17, nonbinary, white, West |
| No, because I've been avoiding people and things, so hopefully I can keep my exposure down | 24, male, American Indian, Midwest | ||
| Already had COVID-19 (n = 25, 6.9%) | I think I already had it in early March. I'm being above average safe like a B but it can affect anyone | 22, female, black, South | |
| I already had COVID and recovered | 16, transgender, American Indian, West | ||
| COVID-19 is not that serious or infectious (n = 19, 5.2%) | It's not too bad. If I was gonna get it, I'd already have honestly. I've worked two jobs in the fast food industry and am out for over 12 hours of the day | 15, female, white, Midwest | |
| It is hard for me to imagine getting COVID-19 because I feel as though I've been desensitized to it. I don't personally know anybody who has gotten it, and I've still worked my job and done alright in school throughout this pandemic. I will be going to college starting this August, though, and it will possibly pose a threat there | 18, male, white, Midwest | ||
| I am an overall healthy person and not worried about it | 18, female, white, South |
Percentages refer to percentage of participants in the category.
Themes and representative quotes regarding perceived impact of contracting COVID-19 on participants' lives (n = 752 participants)
| Category | Themes | Quote | Participant characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Significant or moderate impact (n = 679, 90.3%) | Self-isolation (n = 371, 54.6%) | …if I did contract the virus I would be unable to see my family members until I fully recovered. This would be really challenging emotionally for me, and for them | 23, female, white, Midwest |
| I would have to self-isolate as I cannot risk giving it to my at-risk loved ones | 19, male, American Indian, South | ||
| Impact on work (n = 135, 19.9%) | It would prevent me from working which is what my life consists of so it would be negative impact | 19, male, white, Northeast | |
| It would upend pretty much everything, even just by forcing me to take time off work | 21, transgender, white, West | ||
| Impact on education (n = 91, 13.4%) | It would be rough as a college student having to self-isolate at home and not be able to actually attend class and participate in study groups | 19, male, white, West | |
| I wouldn't be able to do school work or worry about college. I would be scared cuz there's no cure | 16, female, black, South | ||
| Impact on personal and family finances (n = 63, 9.3%) | I'd have to stay home from work and so would my parents. I wouldn't mind but they would be stressed out about money | 18, female, black, Northeast | |
| I would not have the money to afford health care | 20, male, white, Midwest | ||
| Physical health consequences (n = 184, 27.1%) | Well. I could die, it could cause irreparable damage to my lungs or maybe some other important organ in my body… | 20, transgender, white, Midwest | |
| Since I'm young hopefully not much but there's a risk I'll get long lasting effects | 17, male, American Indian/Hispanic, West | ||
| Mental health consequences (n = 69, 10.2%) | I would become very depressed | 17, female, black, South | |
| I would need to quarantine for 2 weeks, which would negatively impact my mental health due to loneliness | 20, male, white, South | ||
| High-risk, including self or family (n = 94, 13.8%) | I could experience complications because I have a congenital heart disease. I would also not be able to see my friends or go to work… | 16, female, white, Northeast | |
| I have asthma, so it could probably kill me. My mother also has asthma and a number of other illnesses that could easily contribute to it being fatal to her as well if I were to spread it to her. Quite frankly, this virus could ruin my family's life | 21, nonbinary, black, Midwest | ||
| Little or no impact (n = 50, 6.6%) | Illness would not be serious (n = 19, 38.0%) | I think it would be like a cold and I'd stay home get better and move on like the flu | 16, female, Hispanic white, South |
| I'm thinking that I will most likely be asymptomatic | 23, male, white, Midwest | ||
| Already staying home and taking precautions (n = 9, 18.0%) | It wouldn't really [impact me]. I'll probably be doing the same thing I'm doing now | 16, female, black, South | |
| Nothing would change, I stay home 99% of the time anyway | 24, male, Asian, Midwest |
Percentages refer to percentage of participants in the category.
Themes and representative quotes regarding level of concern regarding spreading COVID-19 to others (n = 726 participants)
| Category | Themes | Quote | Participant characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very or moderately concerned (n = 624, 86.0%) | Concern about severity and infectiousness (n = 209, 33.5%) | It spreads really easily through the air, and spreads the most before I would even realize I was sick. | 17, nonbinary, white, Northeast |
| I would be very concerned because this isn’t child's play. This is bad. It can take out healthy people kinda bad. | 19, female, black, South | ||
| Obligation to reduce the spread of COVID-19 (n = 191; 30.6%) | I would be extremely concerned because I care about other people. That seems to be an unreasonable belief for some people, but if I knew I was positive I would quarantine myself completely (as best as possible) | 21, female, black, Northeast | |
| I would be very concerned. I feel irresponsible doing anything but quarantining, even social distancing | 19, male, white, West | ||
| Concern about spreading COVID-19 to high-risk people (n = 144; 23.1%) | I would be very concerned, I wouldn’t want anyone else to get it that has a higher risk of not being able to recover from it | 16, female, Hispanic/other, West | |
| Quite concerned because covid19 is quite infectious and I would never want to purposefully or accidentally increase the chances of infecting a high-risk persons | 23, male, biracial, Northeast | ||
| Difficulty of isolating from others (n = 135; 21.6%) | I live with multiple people, one of whom travels to work everyday via train | 19, female, Hispanic white, Northeast | |
| I would be seriously concerned, since I live in close quarters with other's and in my hall, we would share a community restroom, as well as being someone who would regularly talk to residents. | 20, nonbinary, white, West | ||
| Little or no concern (n = 93, 12.8%) | Would take precautions (n = 83; 89.2%) | I wouldn't be very concerned about it because I would probably just remain at home for other people's safety. | 21, male, biracial, west |
| I would lay in bed all day. Already did actually. I couldn't get up | 18, male, white, South | ||
| I wouldn't really care I would probably continue life as usual but I would try to stay indoor for 14 days and if I couldn't I would at least do the social distancing part | 24, female, Asian, South |
Percentages refer to percentage of participants in the category.
Proportion of participants reporting wearing face coverings always or most of the time when around others, by demographic characteristics (n = 719 participants)a
| Variable | Sample size | No. (%) wearing face coverings always or most of the time | Average marginal effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||
| 14–17 years | 240 | 210 (87.5%) | Reference |
| 18–24 years | 479 | 431 (90.0%) | 5.2 (−2.3, 12.6) |
| Gender | |||
| Female | 372 | 335 (90.1%) | Reference |
| Male | 287 | 249 (86.8%) | −4.1 (−9.4, 1.2) |
| Other | 60 | 57 (95.0%) | 5.3 (−.1, 11.3) |
| Race/ethnicity | |||
| Non-Hispanic white | 400 | 346 (86.5%) | Reference |
| Non-Hispanic black | 60 | 52 (86.7%) | 1.1 (−8.7, 10.9) |
| Hispanic/any race | 94 | 88 (93.6%) | 8.2 (2.1, 14.2) |
| Non-Hispanic Asian | 103 | 99 (96.1%) | 10.3 (5.2, 15.4) |
| Other or multiracial/non-Hispanic | 61 | 55 (90.2%) | 4.0 (−4.4, 12.4) |
| Missing | 1 | 1 (100.0%) | N/A |
| Participant education level | |||
| Less than high school | 254 | 227 (89.4%) | Reference |
| High school graduate | 114 | 102 (89.5%) | −1.7 (−8.4, 5.0) |
| Some college or technical school | 222 | 193 (86.9%) | −6.5 (−14.1, 1.1) |
| Associate's or technical school graduate | 25 | 24 (96.0%) | 4.5 (−4.7, 13.8) |
| Bachelor's degree or higher | 104 | 95 (91.4%) | −2.1 (−10.8, 6.6) |
| Region | |||
| Northeast | 106 | 96 (90.6%) | Reference |
| Midwest | 251 | 225 (89.6%) | −.7 (−7.4, 5.9) |
| South | 200 | 171 (85.5%) | −5.0 (−12.3, 2.3) |
| West | 162 | 149 (92.0%) | −.1 (−7.4, 7.2) |
| Free lunch status while in high school | |||
| No | 449 | 401 (89.3%) | Reference |
| Yes | 263 | 233 (88.6%) | −2.0 (−7.3, 3.3) |
| Missing | 7 | 7 (100.0%) | N/A |
N/A, not applicable.
7 participants with missing data for race/ethnicity and/or free lunch status were excluded from the sample when conducting the regression analysis. Consequently, the sample size for the regression was 712.
Average marginal effects represent the absolute change in the predicted probability of the outcome if all respondents had a particular value of the categorical variable compared with the reference category, holding other variables at their observed values.
Includes participants still in high school.
Themes and representative quotes regarding factors that influence mask use (n = 701 participants)
| Themes | Quote | Participant characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Reducing the risk of others getting sick (n = 148, 21.1%) | Just protecting others and not being selfish | 19, male, Asian, West |
| My common sense that masks prevent the spread of COVID-19 and asymptotic people can still be carriers and my basic human decency to care about other people not getting it | 24, female, Hispanic white, Midwest | |
| Reducing personal risk of contracting COVID-19 (n = 107, 15.3%) | I always wear a mask, because it reduces the chances of me getting infected (or me infecting someone else if I don't know that I'm infected myself) | 23, male, white, Midwest |
| The fact that I don't live with them, they could be sick | 17, female, Asian, Northeast | |
| Depending on the setting (ability to physically distance indoors or outdoors; type of activity) | The amount of distance/barriers between myself and the person are the largest contributing factor | 21, nonbinary, black, Midwest |
| I think proximity is a big thing. If I am outside and distant from others I may not keep my mask on, but indoors is a different story | 22, female, Asian, West | |
| Depending on relationship with others (n = 138, 19.7%) | How well I know them. I always wear one if I go out to a store or to eat, but not always with my friends | 18, female, black, Northeast |
| If they are classmates that I hang out with often I don't wear a mask. Otherwise I do | 24, male, white, Midwest | |
| Influenced by the behavior of others (taking precautions, peer pressure) | How much contact they've had with other people and if they've been at home social distancing | 20, female, biracial, South |
| Unless I am very certain about a close friend's level of precaution, I don't take any risks. I am ALWAYS masked with strangers | 19, male, white, Midwest | |
| Public health recommendations and policy mandates (n = 98, 14.0%) | Public health policy from scientists | 24, nonbinary, white, Midwest |
| The CDC and WHO all say that wearing a mask helps stop the spread | 17, female, American Indian, Northeast | |
| If it's required to wear one to enter a store I will wear one. If not then I don’t | 18, male, white, South | |
| Rules of the government rather than my own personal philosophy | 24, female, Asian, South |
Percentages refer to percentage of participants in the category.