Terri D. Conley, Jennifer L. Piemonte, Ananya Mangla, Nainika Mateti, Soha Tariq, T. Ariel Yang
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Pandemic tradeoffs: US residents’ perceptions of detrimental outcomes associated with COVID lockdowns
Policies designed to prevent COVID-19 deaths arguably yielded trade-offs with other adverse outcomes associated with lockdowns. In a nationally representative study of Americans, we queried participants about how tolerant they were of these trade-offs, expressed as binary choices. We asked participants—by putting them in the shoes of a medical policymaker—to choose one adverse outcome (of a pair) to prevent and one to allow. Participants expressed greater desire to prevent child abuse, intimate partner violence, and deaths associated with economic downturns than COVID deaths, suggesting that the public perceived that detrimental effects of the lockdowns are more regrettable than potential additional COVID deaths.
期刊介绍:
Recent articles in ASAP have examined social psychological methods in the study of economic and social justice including ageism, heterosexism, racism, sexism, status quo bias and other forms of discrimination, social problems such as climate change, extremism, homelessness, inter-group conflict, natural disasters, poverty, and terrorism, and social ideals such as democracy, empowerment, equality, health, and trust.