| Literature DB >> 34843096 |
Jan Keller1, Dominika Kwasnicka2,3, Lea O Wilhelm4, Noemi Lorbeer5, Theresa Pauly6, Antonia Domke5, Nina Knoll5, Lena Fleig4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective hand washing (for at least 20 s, with water and soap) is one of the health behaviors protecting against infection transmissions. Behavior change interventions supporting the initiation and maintenance of hand washing are crucial to prevent infection transmissions. Based on the Health Action Process Approach, the aim of this research was to conduct a pre-post analysis of hand washing and related cognitions (i.e., intention, self-efficacy, self-monitoring), measured up to 100 days following an intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior change intervention; COVID-19; Hand washing; Intention; Self-efficacy; Self-monitoring
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34843096 PMCID: PMC8628490 DOI: 10.1007/s12529-021-10042-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Med ISSN: 1070-5503
Fig. 1Four assessments of hand washing–related cognitions predicting next-week hand washing
Fig. 2Spaghetti plot of hand washing frequency of n = 89 participants across the daily diary period (D0-D86). Note. Curve in bold reflects mean levels of respective study days
Descriptive statistics of hand washing–related cognitions and hand washing
| Hand washing–related cognitions | Wilks | Effect size | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intention (1–6) | 4.64 (1.09) | 4.39 (1.12) | 4.32a (1.17) | 4.03a (1.20) | 4.05 (1.21) | Decrease: | |
| Self-efficacy (1–6) | 4.45b (0.87) | 4.14b (1.02) | 4.04 (1.01) | 4.12 (1.19) | 4.27 (1.19) | Decrease: | |
| Self-monitoring (1–6) | 3.65c (1.32) | 4.30c (1.07) | 4.11 (1.15) | 4.21 (1.15) | 4.26 (1.22) | Increase: | |
68 ≤ n ≤ 89 participants due to missing values. “D” refers to day of assessment following baseline. Significant between-assessment differences, a: t(65) = 2.17, p = .034; b: t(87) = 3.13, p = .002; c: t(87) = − 4.19, p < .001
M mean, SD standard deviation
Bivariate within- and between-person correlations between hand washing–related cognitions and hand washing
| Within-person | Between-person | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | ||||||
| 1. Intention | .07 | − .05 | ||||
| 2. Self-efficacy | .02 | .03 | .19 | |||
| 3. Self-monitoring | ||||||
| 4. Next-week hand washing | ||||||
n = 89 participants. t = 4 occasions. Significant correlations in bold
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Fixed effects estimates for two-level models predicting hand washing, with covariates
| Intercept (at study start, D0) | 4.96 (0.50) | < .001 | 3.97; 5.94 |
| Time (assessment following D0) | 0.19; 0.61 | ||
| Within-person intention | −0.05 (0.10) | .635 | −0.26; 0.16 |
| Between-person intention | 0.51 (0.41) | .221 | −0.31; 1.33 |
| Within-person self-efficacy | 0.20 (0.16) | .212 | −0.12; 0.51 |
| Between-person self-efficacy | −0.06 (0.44) | .892 | −0.94; 0.82 |
| Within-person self-monitoring | 0.14 (0.09) | .135 | −0.04; 0.33 |
| Between-person self-monitoring | 0.20; 1.84 | ||
| Age | 0.10 (0.06) | .098 | −0.02; 0.21 |
| Sex (0 = female; 1 = male) | −0.64 (0.84) | .452 | −2.32; 1.04 |
| Flu-like symptoms | −1.76 (1.27) | .170 | −4.29; 0.77 |
| Number of persons in household | −0.31 (0.24) | .196 | −0.78; 0.16 |
| Working in home office | 0.91 (0.67) | .178 | −0.43; 2.26 |
| Negative outcome expectancies at D0 | −0.13 (0.38) | .734 | −0.88; 0.63 |
| Within-person risk perception | −0.15 (0.21) | .469 | −0.55; 0.26 |
| Between-level risk perception | 0.66 (0.63) | .297 | −0.59; 1.92 |
| Intercept (at study start, D0) | 2.33 (8.11) | .773 | |
| Within-person self-efficacy | 0.48 (0.30) | .115 | |
Analyses refer to n = 88 participants with 310 observations due to a missing value of one participant on the sex variable. Significant predictions in bold. A maximized random effect structure was modeled
B unstandardized estimate, SE standard error, CI confidence interval