| Literature DB >> 34832021 |
Bartosz M Nowak1, Cezary Miedziarek2, Szymon Pełczyński3, Piotr Rzymski4,5.
Abstract
The response to the pandemic requires access to accurate information and public understanding and adherence to preventive measures. This online cross-sectional study of adult Poles (n = 1337) assessed the frequency of COVID-19 preventive behaviors, fears related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and beliefs in COVID-19-related conspiracy theories during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic when the nationwide lockdown was imposed (April 2020). As shown, 22% of surveyed admitted not to wash their hands frequently, while 12% did not use disinfectants. These two behaviors were also less frequent in individuals with medical education. The highest levels of pandemic-related fears were associated with health loss in relatives, pandemic-induced economic crisis, and government using a pandemic to control citizens by the state. A significant share of surveyed individuals believed that the pandemic was intentional action to weaken non-Chinese economies (32%) or was deliberately induced for profits from selling vaccines (27%). Men, individuals with no children, and subjects with lower education were significantly less likely to adhere to sanitary measures (handwashing, disinfection, avoiding face touching, changes in greeting etiquette, face-covering when coughing or sneezing), and were less concerned over self and relatives' health. At the same time, men were less prone than women to the conspiracy theories related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The results indicate that adherence to sanitary measures during the pandemic can be a challenge also in developed countries, while misinformation campaigns (also concerning vaccines) have already affected the general public during the early phase of the epidemiological outbreak. The study provides observations that may be useful in the management of the public response to future epidemics.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; fear; infodemic; pandemic; preventive measures; social media
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34832021 PMCID: PMC8618240 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182212266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
The demographic breakdown of the studied group (n = 1337).
| Characteristics | Women ( | Men ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35.8 ± 10.9 | 30.8 ± 11.5 | 35.1 ± 11.1 | |
| 63.6 (722) | 29.7 (60) | 58.5 (782) |
The adherence (%) to preventive measures in different subgroups of the studied population (n = 1337). p-value indicating significant differences is given in bold (Pearson’s χ2 test).
| Behavior | Men / | Rural / | Tertiary Education / Other Education | Medical Education / | Children |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequent hand washing | 71.8/78.7 | 77.0/77.9 | 78.6/76.6 | 70.0/78.5 | 77.0/78.7 |
| Avoiding face touching | 62.9/75.2 | 71.9/74.0 | 74.0/72.5 | 73.1/73.3 | 76.6/68.7 |
| Avoiding handshake | 85.2/92.5 | 91.2/91.6 | 94.0/88.4 | 90.8/91.5 | 93.6/88.3 |
| Covering mouth when coughingor sneezing | 70.3/85.0 | 84.7/81.9 | 83.3/82.3 | 75.4/83.6 | 85.0/79.6 |
| Using disinfection | 80.2/89.9 | 89.1/88.1 | 90.4/86.1 | 78.5/89.5 | 90.2/86.0 |
The fears ((median (interquartile range)) related to the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences in different subgroups of the studied population (n = 1337), evaluated using a 10-point Likert-type scale. p-value indicating significant differences is given in bold (Mann–Whitney U-test).
| Fear | Men / | Rural / | Tertiary Education / Other Education | Medical Education / | Children / |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Job loss | 3 (1–7)/4 (1–8) | 3 (1–8)/4 (1–8) | 4 (1–8)/3 (1–8) | 1.5 (1–6)/4 (1–8) | 4 (1–9)/3 (1–7) |
| Fear overown health | 4 (2–6)/7 (4–10) | 6 (3–9)/6 (3–9) | 7 (4–9)/5 (3–9) | 5 (3–8)/6 (3–9) | 8 (5–10)/5 (3–8) |
| Fear over family member health | 7 (5–9)/10 (7–10) | 9 (6–10) /10 (7–10) | 9.5 (7–10)/9 (6–10) | 9 (7–10)/9 (7–10) | 10 (7–10)/9 (6–10) |
| Economic crisis | 8 (5–9)/9 (7–10) | 8 (6–10)/9 (7–10) | 9 (7–10)/8 (5–10) | 8 (6–10)/9 (6–10) | 9 (7–10)/8 (6–9) |
| Political crisis | 5 (3–8)/6 (3–9) | 6 (3–9)/6 (3–9) | 7 (4–9)/5 (2–8) | 6 (3–8)/6 (3–9) | 6 (3–9)/6 (3–8) |
| Increased control of the citizens | 8 (4–10)/9 (5–10) | 8 (5–10)/9 (5–10) | 9 (6–10) /8 (4–10) | 8 (4–9)/9 (5–10) | 9 (6–10)/8 (5–10) |
The frequency (%) of beliefs in conspiracy theories on COVID-19 in different subgroups of the studied population (n = 1337). p-value indicating significant differences is given in bold (Pearson’s χ2 test).
| Conspiracy | Men / | Rural / Urban | Tertiary Education / Other Education | Medical Education /Nonmedical Education | Children /No Children |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COVID-19 pandemic induced by | 5.5/16.1 | 16.7/13.5 | 12.1/17.3 | 6.2/15.4 | 19.3/7.8 |
| COVID-19 pandemic as an action | 10.9/17.9 | 21.4/14.7 | 14.2/19.9 | 12.3/17.3 | 18.4/14.6 |
| COVID-19 pandemic induced by the Chinese government to weaken other economies | 25.2/32.6 | 35.7/29.5 | 28.7/34.7 | 27.7/31.9 | 34.8/26.9 |
| COVID-19 pandemic as an action of pharmaceutical industry to sell vaccines | 19.3/28.6 | 29.0/26.4 | 25.8/28.9 | 16.9/28.3 | 31.2/21.6 |