印度老年人与COVID-19相关的恐惧和信息寻求行为

S. Vaidyanathan, S. Jaiswal
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摘要

背景:由于一些与大流行相关的限制,老年人作为COVID-19的高危人群更容易受到心理健康后遗症的影响。本研究旨在评估印度老年人与COVID-19相关的恐惧和信息寻求行为。方法:这是一项在线、观察性横断面研究。通过社交媒体分发了一份开放获取的电子问卷邀请(谷歌表格)。该表格包含社会人口学细节、对COVID-19的恐惧量表(FCV-19S)和一份关于COVID-19信息寻求行为的原始问卷。记录≥60岁成人的反应。采用SPSS v20进行分析,采用Mann-Whitney U检验比较FCV-19S在信息寻求变量间的得分。结果:共获得150份完整的问卷。受访者平均年龄67±5.44岁;FCV-19S评分中位数为11分;9.33%的受访者对COVID-19有明显的恐惧。电视/电台(55.3%)是最受欢迎的资讯来源,其次是报纸/杂志(40.7%)。预防措施(75.3%)和疾病症状(70%)是最受欢迎的信息。那些花费比预期更多时间搜索信息的人的恐惧得分明显更高(P = 0.025)。在信息寻求行为及其后果的其他参数上,恐惧得分无显著差异。结论:不到10%的老年人对COVID-19有明显的恐惧。所寻求的信息主要是关于疾病症状、预防措施和指导方针,并通过被动来源而不是主动搜索或亲自寻找。那些恐惧得分较高的人可能会花费比预期更多的时间来搜索信息,并且不太可能察觉到由于上述行为而导致的任何功能障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fear and Information-Seeking Behavior Related to COVID-19 in Older Indian Adults
Background: Elderly, a high-risk population for COVID-19, are further vulnerable to mental health sequelae due to several pandemic-related restrictions. This study aimed to assess fear and information-seeking behavior related to COVID-19 among older Indian adults. Methodology: It was an online, observational cross-sectional study. An open-access e-invite to the questionnaire (on Google forms) was circulated through social media. The form contained sociodemographic details, fear of COVID-19 scale (FCV-19S), and an original questionnaire on information-seeking behavior in COVID-19. Responses of adults ≥60 years of age were noted. Analyses were done with SPSS v20, and Mann–Whitney U test was used to compare the FCV-19S scores among information-seeking variables. Results: A total of 150 completed responses were obtained. Mean age of respondents was 67 ± 5.44 years; median FCV-19S score was 11; 9.33% of respondents had significant fear of COVID-19. TV/Radio (55.3%) followed by newspaper/magazines (40.7%) were the most preferred source of information. Preventive measures (75.3%) and symptoms of disease (70%) were the most sought-after information. Those who spent more time than intended searching for information have significantly higher fear scores (P = 0.025). There was no significant difference in fear score for other parameters of information-seeking behavior and its consequences. Conclusion: Less than 10% of study population of older adults had a significant fear of COVID-19. Information sought is mostly on symptoms of disease, preventive measures, and guidelines and sought through passive sources rather than active searching or in-person. Those with higher fear scores are likely to spend more time searching for information than intended and are less likely to perceive any dysfunction due to said behavior.
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