| Literature DB >> 35867687 |
Melissa M Karnaze1,2, John Bellettiere1, Cinnamon S Bloss1,2.
Abstract
This investigation examined how dispositional compassion and empathy were associated with prosocial behaviors and attitudes in the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Every two weeks from March 22 to June 15, 2020, we fielded a survey to a new cohort of adults in the U.S. Compassion related to whether one stayed home to protect others, more hours spent staying home and distancing from others, and more frequent mask wearing in public, in the past two weeks. Compassion also related to greater perceived ability to help others who were negatively affected. Empathy related to more endorsement of understanding others' fear of COVID-19, and less endorsement of the view that others were overreacting to COVID-19. There was an interaction between empathy and political ideology, suggesting that empathy may matter for understanding others' fear among those with more conservative-leaning beliefs. Empathy also related to greater understanding that sheltering-in-place helps prevent the spread of COVID-19. Findings suggest that messaging and interventions to increase compassion and empathy may promote public health behaviors during a pandemic regardless of political orientation. Targeting empathy may be one way to reach individuals with more conservative political beliefs, and it is important to use an evidence-based approach accounting for political party differences in motivated reasoning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35867687 PMCID: PMC9307157 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0271829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Participant characteristics (March 2020 through July 2020).
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age, | 46.86 (15.81) |
| Female sex, | 2806 (51%) |
| Race/ethnicity, | |
| Asian | 345 (6%) |
| Black | 513 (9%) |
| White | 4403 (80%) |
| Other Race | 272 (5%) |
| Hispanic/Latino Ethnicity, | 573 (10%) |
| Education, | |
| Less than college | 2139 (39%) |
| College degree | 1961 (35%) |
| More than college | 1433 (26%) |
| Employment, | |
| Non-remote work | 1464 (27%) |
| Remote work | 2219 (40%) |
| Unemployed | 1850 (33%) |
| Income, | |
| $0-$49,999 | 1978 (36%) |
| $50,000-$99,999 | 2126 (38%) |
| $100,000-$149,999 | 896 (16%) |
| > $150,000 | 533 (10%) |
| Increased childcare (Yes), | 983 (18%) |
| COVID-19 diagnosis (Yes), | 86 (2%) |
| Social desirability, | 5.17 (2.38) |
| Political ideology, | 4.30 (1.90) |
Fig 1Depicts the forest plots for the associations (standardized odds ratios or beta coefficients) between compassion and three health behaviors: Whether one stayed home, time stayed home, time keeping distance from others, and mask wearing frequency.
The first forest plot for each health behavior outcome is for the total sample, and the following three forest plots are for the sub-groups of liberal-leaning, independent, and conservative-leaning participants. The figure also depicts the 95% confidence intervals and the p-value for the interaction term between compassion and the continuous variable of political ideology.
Fig 2Depicts the forest plots for the associations (standardized beta coefficients) between empathy and three prosocial attitudes: Can understand others’ fear, viewing others as overreacting, and belief that staying home prevents the spread of COVID-19.
The first forest plot for each attitude outcome is for the total sample, and the following three forest plots are for the sub-groups of liberal-leaning, independent, and conservative-leaning participants. The figure also depicts the 95% confidence intervals and the p-value for the interaction term between empathy and political ideology.
Standardized odds ratios and regression coefficients for dispositional compassion and empathy in relation to health behaviors and prosocial attitudes, in models with and without political ideology.
| Exposure Variable | Outcome Variable | Model 1 | Model 2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |||
| Compassion | Whether one stayed home for others | 1.58 (1.47, 1.70) | < .001 | 1.55 (1.44, 1.66) | < .001 |
|
| P | P | |||
| Compassion | Time spent staying home | 0.12 (0.09, 0.15) | < .001 | 0.11 (0.09, 0.14) | < .001 |
| Compassion | Time keeping distance from others | 0.14 (0.12, 0.17) | < .001 | 0.14 (0.11, 0.16) | < .001 |
| Compassion | Frequency of mask wearing in public | 0.13 (0.09, 0.18) | < .001 | 0.11 (0.06, 0.15) | < .001 |
|
| |||||
| Empathy | Can understand others’ fear | -0.26 (0.23, 0.29) | < .001 | 0.23 (0.20, 0.26) | < .001 |
| Empathy | Viewing others as overreacting | -0.25 (-0.28, -0.23) | < .001 | -0.19 (-0.22, -0.17) | < .001 |
| Empathy | Belief that staying home prevents spread | -0.23 (0.20, 0.26) | < .001 | -0.23 (0.20, 0.25) | < .001 |
Note. Standardized odds ratios and beta coefficients (β) are presented for both models. Model 1 included the following covariates: age, sex, race, ethnicity, gender, income, education, employment, social desirability, personal diagnosis of COVID-19, increased childcare responsibilities, cohort number, and sample source (MTurk or Qualtrics). Model 2 included all Model 1 covariates along with political ideology. Outcomes were assessed at different points in the study, and the resulting available data for each outcome were: n = 5,533 for the outcomes of whether one stayed home, time spent home and keeping a distance from others; n = 1,867 for the outcome of mask wearing; n = 5,533 for the outcomes “Can understand others’ fear” and “Viewing others as overreacting”; and n = 4,635 for the outcome “Belief that staying home prevents spread”.