| Literature DB >> 34722369 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic-induced changes have threatened the psychological wellbeing of travelling. This review aims to appraise a range of perceived psychological variables used to realize how the pandemic has influenced tourist behavior.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; Mental wellbeing; Psychological wellbeing; Tourism; Travel
Year: 2021 PMID: 34722369 PMCID: PMC8542819 DOI: 10.18502/ijph.v50i9.7045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Public Health ISSN: 2251-6085 Impact factor: 1.429
Fig. 1:Summary of the literature search and review process
Summary of the involved publications in the review
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Travel medicine and psychopathology, pandemic-related anxiety scales, the fear of COVID-19 Scale, behavioural adjustment or avoidance related to travel-specific phobic | Quantitative | US & Denmark | Developed a construct that measures the pandemic-induced changes in tourist beliefs and travel behaviour, and the intra-personal anxiety of travellers | This construct can deliver explanations for changes in travel behaviour during the pandemic | |
| ( | Tourists’ perceived discrimination during the pandemic and psychological and travel-induced well-being | Perceived discrimination/Anxiety/Wellbeing/COVID-19 worries/Social media | Quantitative | China | Perceived discrimination against tourists from the epicentre unfavourably evokes anxious sentiment, which in turn devastates their post-trip well-being. Active social media participation serves as a protective distractive. | Discrimination threatens the well-being of the global public health crisis. |
| ( | The mechanism behind tourist avoidance behaviour in times of global health crises | The negative effect of COVID-19/ | Quantitative | U.S | The negative effect of COVID-19 influences perceived health risk and will induce mental wellbeing and perceived uncertainty. | Clarified the perception of fear (tourist avoidance behaviour) during global health crises |
| ( | How fear of Covid-29 can lead to discrimination and then travel anxiety | Fear of Covid-19/ | Quantitative | Hong-Kong | Fear of COVID-19, travel anxiety and risk attitude negatively impact travel intention. | Fear of covid has no direct impact while increasing the risk attitude, and travel anxiety will impact travel intention. |
| ( | Motivators and demotivators to travel during the COVID-19 pandemic | Perceived obstacles for tourism due to the pandemic/ | Quantitative | Italy | The obstacles to travel are anxiety, and fear about a sudden return of Corona/ | The senior people believe that Covid-19 will change the way to go on holiday |
| ( | Travel motivations in the contexts of the health crisis | - | Exploratory qualitative approach | Western Australia | Travel motives during pandemic: | The majority of tourists are willing to travel domestically and have concerns to travel internationally. |
| ( | The travel intention during Covid-19 | Attitude/Subjective norms/Positive emotions/Negative emotions/perceived behavioural control/Desire/perceived severity of Covid-19/frequency of past travel/Willingness to adopt PNPIs | quantitative | India | Attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioural control, and positive emotion positively anticipates the desire to travel during COVID-19. | The perceived severity of COVID-19 indirectly influences travel intention through the willingness to adopt PNPIs. |
| ( | The effect of COVID-19 risk perception on behavioural intention towards ‘untact’ | Cognitive risk perception/affective risk perception/attitude/subjective norms/perceived behavioural control/behavioural intention | quantitative | South Korea | Affective risk perception is an antecedent of attitude. | Significant influence of risk perceptions on behavioural intention and the mediating impact of demographic factors. |
| ( | The influence of perceived risk from Covid-19 on intention to travel and willingness to pay for safety measures on trips | Perceived risk of travelling/attitude to travel during pandemic/perceived behavioural control of travelling during pandemic/subjective norm of travelling during pandemic/intention to travel during pandemic/willingness to pay for higher safety measures when travelling during COVID-19 pandemic | quantitative | Spain | Confirms the modulating effects of risk on the antecedents of intention. | The perceived risk of Covid-19 impacts the intention to travel. |
Personal non-pharmaceutical interventions
Referring to consumption behaviour that minimises face-to-face contact (44) has been highlighted as a new customer service strategy in the digital era (45)