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National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out

Protective behaviors such as mask wearing and physical distancing are critical to slow the spread of COVID-19, even in the context of vaccine scale-up. Understanding the variation in self-reported COVID-19 protective behaviors is critical to developing public health messaging. The purpose of the stu...

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Autores principales: Schneider, John A., Taylor, Bruce G., Hotton, Anna L., Lamuda, Phoebe A., Ozik, Jonathan, Lin, Qinyun, Flanagan, Elizabeth, Tuyet Pho, Mai, Kolak, Marynia, Brewer, Russell, Pagkas-Bather, Jade, Pollack, Harold A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8570526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34739498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259257
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author Schneider, John A.
Taylor, Bruce G.
Hotton, Anna L.
Lamuda, Phoebe A.
Ozik, Jonathan
Lin, Qinyun
Flanagan, Elizabeth
Tuyet Pho, Mai
Kolak, Marynia
Brewer, Russell
Pagkas-Bather, Jade
Pollack, Harold A.
author_facet Schneider, John A.
Taylor, Bruce G.
Hotton, Anna L.
Lamuda, Phoebe A.
Ozik, Jonathan
Lin, Qinyun
Flanagan, Elizabeth
Tuyet Pho, Mai
Kolak, Marynia
Brewer, Russell
Pagkas-Bather, Jade
Pollack, Harold A.
author_sort Schneider, John A.
collection PubMed
description Protective behaviors such as mask wearing and physical distancing are critical to slow the spread of COVID-19, even in the context of vaccine scale-up. Understanding the variation in self-reported COVID-19 protective behaviors is critical to developing public health messaging. The purpose of the study is to provide nationally representative estimates of five self-reported COVID-19 protective behaviors and correlates of such behaviors. In this cross-sectional survey study of US adults, surveys were administered via internet and telephone. Adults were surveyed from April 30-May 4, 2020, a time of peaking COVID-19 incidence within the US. Participants were recruited from the probability-based AmeriSpeak® national panel. Brief surveys were completed by 994 adults, with 73.0% of respondents reported mask wearing, 82.7% reported physical distancing, 75.1% reported crowd avoidance, 89.8% reported increased hand-washing, and 7.7% reported having prior COVID-19 testing. Multivariate analysis (p critical value .05) indicates that women were more likely to report protective behaviors than men, as were those over age 60. Respondents who self-identified as having low incomes, histories of criminal justice involvement, and Republican Party affiliation, were less likely to report four protective behaviors, though Republicans and individuals with criminal justice histories were more likely to report having received COVID-19 testing. The majority of Americans engaged in COVID-19 protective behaviors, with low-income Americans, those with histories of criminal justice involvement, and self-identified Republicans less likely to engage in these preventive behaviors. Culturally competent public health messaging and interventions might focus on these latter groups to prevent future infections. These findings will remain highly relevant even with vaccines widely available, given the complementarities between vaccines and protective behaviors, as well as the many challenges in delivering vaccines.
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spelling pubmed-85705262021-11-06 National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out Schneider, John A. Taylor, Bruce G. Hotton, Anna L. Lamuda, Phoebe A. Ozik, Jonathan Lin, Qinyun Flanagan, Elizabeth Tuyet Pho, Mai Kolak, Marynia Brewer, Russell Pagkas-Bather, Jade Pollack, Harold A. PLoS One Research Article Protective behaviors such as mask wearing and physical distancing are critical to slow the spread of COVID-19, even in the context of vaccine scale-up. Understanding the variation in self-reported COVID-19 protective behaviors is critical to developing public health messaging. The purpose of the study is to provide nationally representative estimates of five self-reported COVID-19 protective behaviors and correlates of such behaviors. In this cross-sectional survey study of US adults, surveys were administered via internet and telephone. Adults were surveyed from April 30-May 4, 2020, a time of peaking COVID-19 incidence within the US. Participants were recruited from the probability-based AmeriSpeak® national panel. Brief surveys were completed by 994 adults, with 73.0% of respondents reported mask wearing, 82.7% reported physical distancing, 75.1% reported crowd avoidance, 89.8% reported increased hand-washing, and 7.7% reported having prior COVID-19 testing. Multivariate analysis (p critical value .05) indicates that women were more likely to report protective behaviors than men, as were those over age 60. Respondents who self-identified as having low incomes, histories of criminal justice involvement, and Republican Party affiliation, were less likely to report four protective behaviors, though Republicans and individuals with criminal justice histories were more likely to report having received COVID-19 testing. The majority of Americans engaged in COVID-19 protective behaviors, with low-income Americans, those with histories of criminal justice involvement, and self-identified Republicans less likely to engage in these preventive behaviors. Culturally competent public health messaging and interventions might focus on these latter groups to prevent future infections. These findings will remain highly relevant even with vaccines widely available, given the complementarities between vaccines and protective behaviors, as well as the many challenges in delivering vaccines. Public Library of Science 2021-11-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8570526/ /pubmed/34739498 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259257 Text en © 2021 Schneider et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schneider, John A.
Taylor, Bruce G.
Hotton, Anna L.
Lamuda, Phoebe A.
Ozik, Jonathan
Lin, Qinyun
Flanagan, Elizabeth
Tuyet Pho, Mai
Kolak, Marynia
Brewer, Russell
Pagkas-Bather, Jade
Pollack, Harold A.
National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title_full National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title_fullStr National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title_full_unstemmed National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title_short National variability in Americans’ COVID-19 protective behaviors: Implications for vaccine roll-out
title_sort national variability in americans’ covid-19 protective behaviors: implications for vaccine roll-out
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8570526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34739498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259257
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