1. Community Attachments are Associated with COVID-19 Public Health Behaviors Among Adolescents in Pakistan
- Author
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Benjamin Oosterhoff, Sadaf Zeb, Shaf Ahmed, and Faiza Nisar
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Original Paper ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Social distance ,Public health ,Social benefits ,Hoarding ,COVID-19 ,Social responsibility ,Developmental psychology ,Adolescence ,Culturally sensitive ,medicine ,Community attachments ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Social trust - Abstract
Background Community attachments are thought to promote adolescents’ engagement in public health behaviors. To date, past research has exclusively examined the social benefits of community attachments among adolescents in the United States and less is known about these benefits among youth in low-income adolescent-dense countries such as Pakistan. Objective The present study examined associations between Pakistani adolescents’ community attachments and COVID-19 public health behaviors, including social distancing, disinfecting, hoarding, news monitoring. Method Adolescents living in Pakistan (N = 1,110; 13–18 years; M = 16.70) reported on their COVID-19 public health behavior (social distancing, disinfecting behaviors, hoarding behaviors, news monitoring) and community attachments (social responsibility values, social trust, self-interest values). Results Greater social responsibility values were associated with greater social distancing (B = .09, p = .009) and disinfecting behavior (B = .39, p
- Published
- 2021