| Literature DB >> 35506690 |
Jiadong Yu1, Bernard S Gorman2, Carolyn M Springer2.
Abstract
Introduction: COVID-19 spread across China and other countries in a matter of weeks. Yet, it is uncertain how people have responded to protective behaviours in this pandemic. This study aims to evaluate how trust in different types of information sources influences the intention to adopt protective behaviours.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; information trust; protective behaviours
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35506690 PMCID: PMC9082741 DOI: 10.1177/00469580221090411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inquiry ISSN: 0046-9580 Impact factor: 2.099
Figure 1.A conceptual model for understanding intention to adopt protective behaviours against COVID-19.
Reliability and Validity Analysis.
| Factor Loading | Cronbach’s Alpha | Composite Reliability | Average Variance Extracted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latent variable | ||||
| Trust in formal information | .95 | .95 | .86 | |
| Item 1 | .91 | |||
| Item 2 | .97 | |||
| Item 3 | .91 | |||
| Trust in informal information | .63 | .65 | .40 | |
| Item 1 | .57 | |||
| Item 2 | .85 | |||
| Item 3 | .42 | |||
| Measurable variable | ||||
| Hand washing | .82 | .83 | .62 | |
| Item 1 | .81 | |||
| Item 2 | .74 | |||
| Item 3 | .83 | |||
| Wearing masks | .82 | .84 | .64 | |
| Item 1 | .83 | |||
| Item 2 | .90 | |||
| Item 3 | .66 | |||
| Social distancing | .73 | .74 | .50 | |
| Item 1 | .60 | |||
| Item 2 | .71 | |||
| Item 3 | .80 | |||
| Mediator | ||||
| Worry | .79 | .81 | .60 | |
| Item 1 | .54 | |||
| Item 2 | .74 | |||
| Item 3 | .83 | |||
| Perceived risk | .71 | .74 | .49 | |
| Item 1 | .61 | |||
| Item 2 | .80 | |||
| Item 3 | .67 | |||
Demographic Characteristic.
| Characteristics | Percent | Sample Size |
|---|---|---|
| Age Group | ||
| Under 25 | 17.2 | 21 |
| 26–35 years | 50.8 | 62 |
| 36–45 years | 18.0 | 22 |
| 46 years and older | 13.8 | 17 |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 81.1 | 99 |
| Male | 13.1 | 16 |
| Decline to answer | 6.1 | 7 |
| Education | ||
| Below high school and high school | 8.9 | 11 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 74.6 | 91 |
| Master’s degree and above | 6.6 | 8 |
| Other professional degree | 9.8 | 12 |
Figure 2.A structure equation model for understanding intentions to adopt protective behaviours against COVID-19.
The Direct and Indirect Effect of Trust in Informal/Formal Information on Social Distancing/Hand Washing Via Perceived Risk/Worry.
| Mediation Estimates 95% Confidence Interval | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effect | Estimate | SE | Lower | Upper | ρ |
| Indirect | −.055 | .06 | −.17 | .006 | .36 |
| Direct | .198 | .11 | −.008 | .405 | .06 |
| Total | .143 | .08 | −.02 | .314 | .1 |
| Informal->risk | .64 | .08 | .48 | .81 | <.001 |
| Risk-> social distancing | −.08 | .09 | −.27 | .09 | .355 |
| Informal->social distancing | .19 | .11 | −.01 | .4 | .006 |
| Indirect | −.04 | .02 | −.10 | .001 | .05 |
| Direct | .27 | .07 | .12 | .42 | <.001 |
| Total | .23 | .07 | .07 | .37 | .004 |
| Formal->worry | .20 | .07 | .04 | .35 | .001 |
| Worry->hand washing | −.25 | .08 | −.42 | −.07 | .004 |
| Formal->hand washing | .28 | .07 | .12 | .42 | <.001 |
*Formal: Trust in formal information; informal: Trust in informal information.
The Effect of Social Desirability on the Relationship Between Worry and Mask Wearing.
| Moderation Estimates 95% Confidence Interval | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | SE | Lower | Upper | ρ | |
| Worry | .16 | .04 | .08 | .23 | <.001 |
| Social desirability score | .029 | .02 | −.005 | .06 | .099 |
| Worry * social desirability score | −.05 | .02 | −.09 | −.02 | .003 |