赞比亚农村地区对COVID-19和艾滋病毒风险的认识及相关预防健康行为

Mei Tan, Philip E Thuma, Susie Hoffman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

风险认知及其与预防性健康行为和其他因素(例如,对疾病的直接体验)的关系对于确定有效的疾病预防目标非常重要。这些关系是否适用于各种疾病还没有得到充分的研究。利用风险认知的整体模型,本研究比较了赞比亚农村社区中COVID-19和艾滋病毒的感知风险水平,检查了感知风险的假设相关因素,并评估了更高的感知风险和/或其相关因素是否与每种疾病的预防行为有关。该样本包括118名成年人,他们参与了一项更大规模的艾滋病毒感染家庭研究。通过调查,收集了风险认知、预防行为、对信息来源的了解、信任、对每种疾病的直接体验和听力、亲社会性等方面的信息。对于每种疾病,感知风险与预防行为无关。COVID-19和艾滋病毒的感知风险水平存在显著差异,它们的相关因素也存在显著差异。拥有可靠的艾滋病毒信息来源与更高的艾滋病毒感知风险有关。直接经历COVID-19与更高的COVID-19感知风险相关,但仅在感兴趣的水平上。尽管针对每种疾病实施预防行为与对每种疾病的更高水平的知识相关,但参与有益于他人的行为(亲社会)的意愿仅与COVID-19预防行为显著相关。不同的疾病引起不同程度的感知风险和参与预防行为,并可能与不同的因素相关。这些差异可能是由于疾病经历的历史,以及文化因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perceptions of COVID-19 and HIV Risk and Related Preventive Health Behaviors in Rural Zambia.

Risk perception, its relationship to preventive health behaviors and other factors (e.g., direct experience of a disease) are important for determining effective targets for disease prevention. Whether these relationships are the same for various diseases has not been well-researched. Drawing on a holistic model of risk perception, this study compares levels of perceived risk for COVID-19 and HIV in a rural Zambian community, examines hypothesized correlates of perceived risk, and evaluates whether higher perceived risk and/or its correlates are associated with practicing preventive behaviors for each disease. The sample included 118 adults participating in a larger study of families affected by HIV. Via surveys, information about risk perception, preventive behaviors, knowledge about, trust in information sources, direct experience and hearing about each disease, and prosociality, were collected. For each disease, perceived risk was not related to its preventive behaviors. Levels of perceived risk for COVID-19 and HIV differed significantly, as did their correlates. Having trusted sources of information about HIV was related to higher perceived risk of HIV. Direct experience of COVID-19 was related to higher perceived risk of COVID-19, but only at a level of interest. Although practicing preventive behaviors for each condition was related to higher levels of knowledge about each disease at a level of interest, willingness to engage in behavior beneficial to others (prosociality) was significantly related only to COVID-19 preventive behaviors. Different diseases provoke different levels of perceived risk and engagement with preventive behaviors and may be correlated with distinct factors. These differences may be due to history of experience with a disease, as well as cultural factors.

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