Perceptions of COVID-19 Risk: How Did People Adapt to the Novel Risk?

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Medical Decision Making Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-13 DOI:10.1177/0272989X231221448
Karen Sepucha, Aaron Rudkin, Ryan Baxter-King, Annette L Stanton, Neil Wenger, Lynn Vavreck, Arash Naeim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: There is limited understanding of how risk perceptions changed as the US population gained experience with COVID-19. The objectives were to examine risk perceptions and determine the factors associated with risk perceptions and how these changed over the first 18 mo of the pandemic.

Methods: Seven cross-sectional online surveys were fielded between May 2020 and October 2021. The study included a population-weighted sample of 138,303 US adults drawn from a market research platform, with an average 68% cooperation rate. Respondents' risk perception of developing COVID in the next 30 days was assessed at each time point. We examined relationships between 30-day risk perceptions and various factors (including sociodemographic features, health, COVID-19 experience, political affiliation, and psychological variables).

Results: COVID risk perceptions were stable across the 2020 surveys and showed a significant decrease in the 2021 surveys. Several factors, including older age, worse health, high COVID worry, in-person employment type, higher income, Democratic political party affiliation (the relatively more liberal party in the United States), low tolerance of uncertainty, and high anxiety were strongly associated with higher 30-d risk perceptions in 2020. One notable change occurred in 2021, in that younger adults (aged 18-29 y) had significantly higher 30-d risk perceptions than older adults did (aged 65 y and older) after vaccination. Initial differences in perception by political party attenuated over time. Higher 30-d risk perceptions were significantly associated with engaging in preventive behaviors.

Limitations: Cross-sectional samples, risk perception item focused on incidence not severity.

Conclusions: COVID risk perceptions decreased over time. Understanding the longitudinal pattern of risk perceptions and the factors associated with 30-d risk perceptions over time provides valuable insights to guide public health communication campaigns.

Highlights: The study assessed COVID-19 risk perceptions at 7 time points over 18 mo of the pandemic in large samples of US adults.Risk perceptions were fairly stable until the introduction of vaccines in early 2021, at which point they showed a marked reduction.Higher COVID-19 30-d risk perceptions were significantly associated with the preventive behaviors of masking, limiting social contact, avoiding restaurants, and not entertaining visitors at home.

对 COVID-19 风险的认识:人们如何适应新风险?
背景:人们对美国人在经历 COVID-19 之后对风险的认识是如何变化的了解很有限。我们的目标是研究风险认知,确定与风险认知相关的因素,以及这些因素在大流行的前 18 个月中是如何变化的:在 2020 年 5 月至 2021 年 10 月期间进行了七次横断面在线调查。研究对象包括从市场调研平台上抽取的 138,303 位美国成年人的人口加权样本,平均合作率为 68%。我们在每个时间点对受访者未来 30 天内罹患 COVID 的风险感知进行了评估。我们研究了 30 天风险认知与各种因素(包括社会人口特征、健康状况、COVID-19 经验、政治派别和心理变量)之间的关系:在 2020 年的调查中,COVID 风险感知保持稳定,而在 2021 年的调查中则出现了显著下降。2020 年,年龄较大、健康状况较差、对 COVID 的担忧程度较高、亲自就业类型、收入较高、民主党党派(美国相对较为自由的党派)、对不确定性的容忍度较低以及焦虑程度较高等因素与较高的 30 d 风险感知密切相关。一个明显的变化发生在 2021 年,即接种疫苗后,年轻人(18-29 岁)的 30 天风险认知明显高于老年人(65 岁及以上)。随着时间的推移,各政党最初的认知差异有所减弱。较高的 30 天风险认知与参与预防行为有明显关联:局限性:横断面样本,风险认知项目侧重于发生率而非严重程度:COVID的风险认知随着时间的推移而降低。了解风险认知的纵向模式以及随着时间推移与 30 天风险认知相关的因素可为指导公共健康宣传活动提供有价值的见解:该研究在大流行 18 个月期间的 7 个时间点对美国成年人的 COVID-19 风险感知进行了评估。风险感知相当稳定,直到 2021 年初疫苗问世后才出现明显下降。
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来源期刊
Medical Decision Making
Medical Decision Making 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.60%
发文量
146
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Decision Making offers rigorous and systematic approaches to decision making that are designed to improve the health and clinical care of individuals and to assist with health care policy development. Using the fundamentals of decision analysis and theory, economic evaluation, and evidence based quality assessment, Medical Decision Making presents both theoretical and practical statistical and modeling techniques and methods from a variety of disciplines.
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