1. Social distancing in America: Understanding long-term adherence to COVID-19 mitigation recommendations
- Author
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Benjamin van Rooij, Megan Brownlee, Olthuis E, Anne Leonore de Bruijn, Malouke Esra Kuiper, Chris Reinders Folmer, Adam Fine, Kooistra Eb, and PSC (FdR)
- Subjects
Male ,Viral Diseases ,History ,Economic growth ,Polymers and Plastics ,Epidemiology ,Emotions ,Social Sciences ,Surveys ,Social Distancing ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Medical Conditions ,Law Enforcement ,Pandemic ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Corporate governance ,Social distance ,Global Leadership ,Law enforcement ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,Research Design ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Medicine ,Female ,Social psychology ,Research Article ,Personality ,Adult ,Impulsivity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Disease Control ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Distancing ,Science ,Physical Distancing ,Population ,Procedural justice ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Compliance (psychology) ,Political science ,medicine ,Humans ,Business and International Management ,education ,Pandemics ,Legitimacy ,Personality Traits ,Survey Research ,Presidential system ,Criminal Punishment ,Public health ,COVID-19 ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Social environment ,Covid 19 ,United States ,Patient Compliance ,Law and Legal Sciences ,Criminal Justice System - Abstract
A crucial question in the governance of infectious disease outbreaks is how to ensure that people continue to adhere to mitigation measures for the longer duration. The present paper examines this question by means of a set of cross-sectional studies conducted in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, in May, June, and July of 2020. Using stratified samples that mimic the demographic characteristics of the U.S. population, it seeks to understand to what extent Americans continued to adhere to social distancing measures in the period after the first lockdown ended. Moreover, it seeks to uncover which variables sustained (or undermined) adherence across this period. For this purpose, we examined a broad range of factors, relating to people’s (1) knowledge and understanding of the mitigation measures, (2) perceptions of their costs and benefits, (3) perceptions of legitimacy and procedural justice, (4) personal factors, (5) social environment, and (6) practical circumstances. Our findings reveal that adherence was chiefly shaped by three major factors: respondents adhered more when they (a) had greater practical capacity to adhere, (b) morally agreed more with the measures, and (c) perceived the virus as a more severe health threat. Adherence was shaped to a lesser extent by impulsivity, knowledge of social distancing measures, opportunities for violating, personal costs, and descriptive social norms. The results also reveal, however, that adherence declined across this period, which was partly explained by changes in people’s moral alignment, threat perceptions, knowledge, and perceived social norms. These findings show that adherence originates from a broad range of factors that develop dynamically across time. Practically these insights help to improve pandemic governance, as well as contributing theoretically to the study of compliance and the way that rules come to shape behavior.
- Published
- 2021