1,116 results on '"de Zwart, O."'
Search Results
2. SARS Knowledge, Perceptions, and Behaviors: a Comparison between Finns and the Dutch during the SARS Outbreak in 2003
- Author
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Vartti, A.-M., Oenema, A., Schreck, M., Uutela, A., de Zwart, O., Brug, J., and Aro, A. R.
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- 2009
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3. Chlamydia trachomatis infections in multi-ethnic urban youth: a pilot combining STI health education and outreach testing in Rotterdam, Netherlands
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Götz, H M, Veldhuijzen, I K, Ossewaarde, J M, de Zwart, O, and Richardus, J H
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- 2006
4. Social-cognitive determinants of HIV risk-taking intentions among men who date men through the Internet.
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Kok, G., Hospers, H. J., Harterink, P., and De Zwart, O.
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HEALTH of gay men ,HIV prevention ,CONDOM use ,ONLINE dating ,GAY men's attitudes ,GAY men's sexual behavior ,ONLINE chat ,GAY men - Abstract
The present study was set up to investigate social-cognitive determinants of HIV-risk precautionary intentions among men who have sex with men (MSM), who meet sex partners on the Internet. Participants were enrolled through the major gay chat room in The Netherlands, www.chatboy.nl, and were asked to complete an online questionnaire. Theory of Planned Behaviour variables attitude, subjective norm, and perceived control explained 55% of the variance in intention to use condoms for anal sex with future e-dates. Adding descriptive norm, personal norm and anticipated regret explained 70%. Sexual fantasies and HIV-status had unique effects on intentions. Differences between high and lower intenders are presented. Limitations of the study are discussed and objectives for an intervention to promote condom use are given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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5. Concurrent partnerships and sexual risk taking among African and Caribbean migrant populations in the Netherlands.
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van Veen, M. G., Schaalma, H., van Leeuwen, A. P., Prins, M., de Zwart, O., van de Laar, M. J. W., and Hospers, H. J.
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HIV infections ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Concurrent partnerships have been recognized as a determinant for the spread of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). We studied the association of concurrent partnerships with sexual behaviour among heterosexual Caribbean and African migrants, who account for a disproportionate burden of STIs and HIV in the Netherlands. Of 1792 migrants, 15% reported concurrent sexual partners in the previous six months. In multivariate multinomial analyses, women were less likely to have concurrent partners than men and they were less likely than men to use condoms with concurrent partners. We could not identify an association with the observed HIV prevalence; however, migrants with concurrent partners were less likely to be tested for HIV. Of migrants tested for STIs, one in three migrants with concurrent partners was diagnosed with an STI. Prevention targeting migrants should address the promotion of HIV/STI testing and stress the potential acceleration of HIV and STI epidemics due to concurrency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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6. Disassortative sexual mixing among migrant populations in the Netherlands: a potential for HIV/STI transmission?
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van Veen, M.G., Kramer, M.A., Op de Coul, E.L.M., van Leeuwen, A.P., de Zwart, O., van de Laar, M.J.W., Coutinho, R.A., and Prins, M.
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HEALTH risk assessment ,SAFE sex ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,AIDS ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,VIRAL antibodies ,MULTICULTURALISM - Abstract
To gain insight into the transmission of HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) among large migrant groups in the Netherlands, we studied the associations between their demographic and sexual characteristics, in particular condom use, and their sexual mixing patterns with other ethnic groups. In 2002-2005, cross-sectional surveys were conducted among migrants from Surinam (Afro- and Hindo-), the Netherlands Antilles, Cape Verde, and Ghana at social venues in three large cities. A questionnaire was administrated and a saliva sample was collected for HIV antibody testing. Of 2105 migrants recruited, 1680 reported sexual contacts, of whom 41% mixed sexually with other ethnicities, including the indigenous Dutch population. Such disassortative mixing was associated with being second-generation migrant, having several sexual partners, and having a steady and concurrent casual partner. Less disassortative mixing occurred in participants reporting visiting the country of origin. The association between condom use and sexual mixing differed by gender, with men using condoms inconsistently being most likely to be mixing with the Dutch indigenous population. HIV infection and recent STI treatment were not associated with disassortative mixing. This study shows substantial sexual mixing among migrant groups. Since disassortative mixing is more prevalent in second-generation migrants, it might increase in the upcoming years. The mixing patterns in relation to concurrency and the reported condom use in this study suggest a possibly increased level of HIV/STI transmission not only within migrant groups but also between migrant groups, especially via men who mix with the indigenous population and via migrant women who mix with non-Dutch casual partners. Although the observed HIV prevalence in migrants (0.6%) is probably too low to lead to much HIV transmission between ethnicity groups, targeted prevention measures are needed to prevent transmission of other STI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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7. Acceptability and consequences of screening for chlamydia trachomatis by home-based urine testing.
- Author
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Götz HM, Veldhuijzen IK, Van Bergen JEA, Hoebe CJP, De Zwart O, Richardus JH, Pilot CT Study Group, Götz, Hannelore M, Veldhuijzen, Irene K, van Bergen, Jan E A M, Hoebe, Christian J P A, de Zwart, Onno, Richardus, Jan H, van Bergen, J E A M, Broer, J, Coenen, A J J, Götz, H M, de Groot, F, Hoebe, C J P A, and Richardus, J H
- Published
- 2005
8. Perceived protective behavioral changes in Chinese residents post-dynamic zero-COVID policy lifting: a cross-sectional study.
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Song, Yuan-Yuan, Xu, Ling, Liu, Dan, Feng, Mei, Yang, Cui, Jiang, Yan, and Wu, Ying
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- 2024
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9. Exploring psychosocial factors influencing sexually transmitted infection intention testing among medical students: a cross-sectional study in two universities.
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Loaiza-Guevara, Valentina, Acosta, María Alejandra Gómez, Álvarez, Angie Valeria Aguirre, Martínez, Valentina Agudelo, Montoya, María Camila Montes, Ramírez, Alexandra Agudelo, and Izquierdo-Condoy, Juan S.
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- 2024
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10. Awareness and satisfaction of the national hepatitis C virus screening campaign among a sample of the general population in Egypt.
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Anwar, Ismail, Mustafa, Mohammed, El Desouky, Eman D., Ammar, Islam, Salem, Marwa Rashad, and AbdAllah, Mohamed
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Background: The researchers conducted the current study to explore knowledge and satisfaction with the Hepatitis C Healthy Lives Initiative among a sample of Egyptians. Methods: An exploratory cross-sectional study was carried out among 1,193 clients attending HCV screening sites via consecutive sampling technique. A structured interview questionnaire was used, including three sections: sociodemographic characteristics, satisfaction with the hepatitis C screening program, and HCV-related knowledge. Results: Approximately half of the enrolled participants showed good HCV knowledge. Males had a higher percentage (51.0%) of good knowledge scores (p = 0.029). Individuals with a university degree scored higher (65.9%) than those with other levels of education. More than half of the participants (701, 58.8%) reported high satisfaction with the screening campaign, with patients with no comorbidities showing more satisfaction (p < 0.05). Participants were motivated to be screened to check their health status (94.9%) and were encouraged mostly by family members (65.9%). Regression analysis revealed that higher education level, employment, having no comorbidity, not living in slums, and having no negative family history of HCV were significant factors in predicting a high level of knowledge. Conclusion: The current study revealed that half of the enrolled participants showed good HCV knowledge. The majority of the study participants were satisfied with the screening campaign. The media played a crucial role in raising awareness of the campaign to eliminate HCV, and it is necessary to consider introducing HCV education via mass media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Is social media more conducive to climate change communication behavior? The mediating role of risk perception and environmental values.
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Wu, Meifen, Long, Ruyin, Chen, Hong, and Wang, Jiaqi
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MASS media influence ,GEOGRAPHICAL perception ,LOCAL mass media ,VALUES (Ethics) ,SOCIAL values ,RISK perception - Abstract
Climate change communication is an important behavioral manifestation of the public's understanding, expression, and participation in addressing climate change. Social media play an important role in the climate change knowledge communication. Does social media promote climate change communication behavior in the Chinese context? Is its effect stronger than other types of media? Combined with the research context, we divide media into central media, local media, and social media and construct the influence mechanism model of media use on climate change communication behavior. In this study, a questionnaire survey was conducted among the public in China, and 1062 valid questionnaires were empirically tested by methods of hierarchical regression and bootstrapping. According to the findings of the study, different media use has a positive effect on climate change communication behavior. While social media is more likely to be used by the public to obtain climate change-related information than central and local media (with a mean value of 3.84 for social media compared to 3.51 for central media and 3.19 for local media), it is actually the central media that have the greatest effect on climate change communication behavior. This is evident in the total effect value, where the central media have a value of 0.21, which is higher than social media's value of 0.20 and local media's value of 0.12. Risk perception and environmental values play an important mediating role in the influence of media use on climate change communication behavior, among which environmental values have the largest mediating effect. (Specifically, the mediating effects of environmental values were 26.83%, 31.28%, and 38.57% for central media, local media, and social media, respectively.) In addition, risk perception can also positively affect environmental values, thus forming a chain mediating effect between media use and climate change communication behavior (the confidence intervals for the chain mediating effect also exclude the numbers 0). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The impact of pandemic threats on intertemporal choices in Chinese and Americans.
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Han, Xu, Wang, Yuwei, and Mu, Yan
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INTERTEMPORAL choice ,CHINESE people ,PANDEMICS ,CROSS-cultural differences ,INFLUENZA - Abstract
Intertemporal decisions are crucial to survival, especially when humans are exposed to ecological threats. However, it remains unclear whether and how pandemic threats impact intertemporal choices across cultures. We conducted two studies in two cultural contexts (N = 1180). Study 1a found that Chinese who perceived more pandemic threats showed higher temporal discounting rates (i.e., preferred immediate smaller over delayed larger rewards), and this relationship was mediated by negative emotions. Study 1b, using threat priming, revealed that Chinese participants primed with a high-threat condition (depicting a pandemic threat) showed higher temporal discounting rates compared to those primed with a low-threat condition (describing the flu). Differently, Study 2a revealed that perceived pandemic threat levels of Americans did not directly predict temporal discounting rates. Using similar threat priming, Study 2b further confirmed that Americans in the high-threat priming condition showed no significant differences in temporal discounting rates compared to those in the low-threat priming condition. The current research deepens the understanding of the cultural difference in the impact of pandemic threats on intertemporal decision-making and further informs the development of interventions that promote individual future-oriented thinking in the face of pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Knowledge, attitude, and practices toward Hepatitis B infection among hemodialysis patients: A nationwide study in Jordan.
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Alaridah, Nader, Jereisat, Rahaf A., Abu-Mutaw, Sara, Abuhani, Haneen O., Jarrar, Raba'a F., Joudeh, Rayan M., Al-Hawadi, Basmalah, Alhawadi, Saif, Al-oyoun, Razan Qasim, Nassr, Hasan, Al-Taher, Mohammad, Qiqieh, Bassel, Ismail, Layan, Al-Abdallat, Haneen, and Abu-Humaidan, Anas H. A.
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CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,HEPATITIS B virus ,HEMODIALYSIS patients ,HEPATITIS B ,EVIDENCE gaps - Abstract
The Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a prevalent blood-borne illness, posing a significant risk to hemodialysis patients particularly due to their potential immunosuppressed status. This study aimed to address HBV awareness among Jordanian hemodialysis patients, filling a gap in regional research. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted at a multicenter governmental hospital in Jordan, with 389 participants. Among them, 61.3% were male, and 80.7% were over 38 years old. While 34% demonstrated a high level of knowledge, Participants with a higher degree of education and those working in the medical field were more informed. Although most participants had an inadequate understanding of HBV symptoms and transmission, they maintained positive attitudes and engaged in infection preventative actions. Enhanced educational efforts are required to raise awareness among hemodialysis patients, and further research is needed to address any reluctance towards preventive practices and seeking treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Why Are Young People Willing to Pay for Health? Chained Mediation Effect of Negative Emotions and Information Seeking on Health Risk Perception and Health Consumption Behavior.
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Li, Jia and Li, Yingyi
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INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,HEALTH Belief Model ,PROTECTION motivation theory ,YOUNG adults ,CONSUMERISM - Abstract
The perception of health risks can influence people's health behaviors. However, in the context of modern consumer society, few people delve into in-depth discussions on health consumption as a form of health protection behavior. Inspired by the Health Belief Model and Protection Motivation Theory, this study interprets health consumption behavior as a new form of health protection behavior. A survey was conducted on a sample of Chinese youth (N = 885) to explore the mechanisms of action between health risk perception and health consumption behavior using structural equation modeling. The study found that: (1) health risk perception has a significant positive impact on the health consumption behavior of young people; (2) negative emotions and information seeking play mediating roles respectively in the mechanism of the impact of health risk perception on health consumption behavior; and (3) in addition to their individual mediating roles, negative emotions and information seeking behavior collectively play a chained mediation role in this process. Implications of these results, both theoretical and practical, are further discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Joint Choice of Fresh Food Purchase Channels and Terminal Delivery Service: A Background on Major Public Health Events.
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Zhu, Huiqi and Jiang, Tianhua
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CONSUMER preferences ,BODY temperature ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RISK perception ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
The paper aims to analyze the consumer joint choice behavior on fresh food purchase channels and terminal delivery services during major public health events, with the purpose of revealing the underlying influencing factors and behavioral characteristics. First, based on random utility maximization theory, the cross-nested logit model is formulated, which takes into account the influence of socioeconomic attribute factors, service attribute factors, risk perception attribute factors and trust perception attribute factors. Second, a questionnaire survey is conducted, and the obtained data are used to estimate the model parameters and perform an elasticity analysis of the utility variables. The parameter estimation results demonstrate that in the context of major public health events, consumers consider adjusting their attitudes toward e-commerce platforms first when the utility variables are altered, and fresh food purchase channels are easily replaced for consumers who choose unmanned equipment home delivery. The elasticity analysis results suggest that consumers are more willing to buy fresh food through community group-buying channels, are more sensitive to the convenience of the purchase process and are less concerned with delivery time. Although person-to-person contact increases the risk of infection, consumers still prefer attended terminal delivery services. Furthermore, consumers least agree with the effectiveness of body temperature detection methods in public places but feel that an effective way to increase consumer trust in enterprises is to strengthen personnel protection measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. "When selling anything to an audience, visible publicity is key:" experiences, barriers, and enablers to participate in a COVID-19 study in Malawi.
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Mdala, Vanessa, Nyirenda, Deborah, Mpinganjira, Samuel, Mwapasa, Victor, and Nyondo-Mipando, Alinane Linda
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THEORY of reasoned action ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,SCIENTIFIC ability ,RIGHT of privacy ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Background: Many studies in infectious diseases struggle to recruit participants. The SARS-CoV-2 infection, transmission dynamics, and household impact in Malawi (SCATHIM) study reported a refusal rate of 57.2%. Adequate publicity can lead to more people participating in studies. This study explored the reasons for participating in the SCATHIM study. Methods: A descriptive qualitative study informed by the theory of reasoned action was conducted in Blantyre between January 2022 and March 2022 to assess factors that influence participation in a COVID-19 study among 10 index cases, 10 caregivers, 10 study decliners, and 5 research staff. The data were collected via in-depth interview guides, audio recorded, transcribed, managed via NVIVO and analysed via a thematic approach. Results: The factors that motivated participation in the study included one's knowledge of COVID-19; potential access to medical services, including free COVID-19 tests for members of the household; financial reimbursements; and the ability to contribute scientific knowledge. The barriers to participation included minimal publicity of the study amidst a novel condition, perceived stigma and discrimination, perceived invasion of privacy, discomfort with the testing procedures, and suboptimal financial reimbursements. Conclusion: Effective publicity and outreach strategies have the potential to decrease refusal rates in study participation, especially if a condition is novel. Studies on infectious diseases should address stigma and discrimination to promote participation and ensure participant safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Decision Regret and Vaccine Hesitancy among Nursing Students and Registered Nurses in Italy: Insights from Structural Equation Modeling.
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Brera, Alice Silvia, Arrigoni, Cristina, Belloni, Silvia, Conte, Gianluca, Magon, Arianna, Arcidiacono, Marco Alfredo, Pasek, Malgorzata, Shabat, Galyna, Bonavina, Luigi, and Caruso, Rosario
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VACCINE hesitancy ,VACCINE safety ,NURSING students ,BOOSTER vaccines ,NURSES - Abstract
This study focused on vaccine hesitancy and decision regret about the COVID-19 vaccine among nursing students (BScN and MScN) and Registered Nurses (RNs) in Italy. The primary aim was to describe decision regret and vaccine hesitancy among these groups and to understand what influences vaccine hesitancy. Data were collected through an e-survey conducted from March to June 2024. The Decision Regret Scale and the Adult Vaccine Hesitancy Scale were employed to assess regret and hesitancy levels, assessing trust, concerns, and compliance regarding vaccination. Among the participants, 8.64% were not vaccinated. The results indicated moderate to high levels of decision regret and diverse levels of trust, concerns, and compliance with COVID-19 vaccination. Structural equation modeling revealed that decision regret significantly predicted Trust (R
2 = 31.3%) and Concerns (R2 = 26.9%), with lower regret associated with higher trust and lower concerns about vaccine safety. The number of COVID-19 vaccine boosters was a significant predictor of Trust and Concerns, with more boosters associated with higher trust and lower concerns. MScN students exhibited higher Compliance compared to RNs (R2 = 2.9%), highlighting the role of advanced education. These findings suggest that addressing decision regret and providing comprehensive vaccine information could enhance trust and compliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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18. Patrons Reaction to Fear in Different Dining Contexts: A Cognitive-Experiential Self-Theory Exploration.
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Jones, Robert Paul and Alimohammadirokni, Mohammad
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RESTAURANTS ,EVIDENCE gaps ,RISK perception ,RESTAURANT customers ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Cognitive-experiential self-theory is a unique model for exploring restaurant patrons' decision making. Fear and its impact on diners' decision making, particularly related to specific dining contexts (dine-in, takeout, and delivery), are limited in their representation in the literature. The COVID-19 pandemic provided an instance where a single fear could be explored universally for dining patrons. This study explores how fear influences diners' perception of risk, antipathy, and avoidance toward restaurant dining and how these factors impact their intention to dine in a restaurant. Furthermore, it investigates how those constructs influence diner decision making regarding the selection of one of the identified dining contexts. Online survey data (n = 1225) of diners were analyzed using SEM. The research finds that fear impacts dining contexts differentially. Additionally, environmental control is identified as a valuable tool in the mitigation of diners' fear. The pandemic had devastating impacts on the restaurant industry, partly due to the lack of research into fear, particularly in dining contexts. This research helps to fill the important research gap through the findings and theoretical and managerial implications provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. How much do LGBTQ+ Filipinos Perceive Media as Threatening? First Steps in the Development of the Perceived Media Threat Scale.
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Shabahang, Reza, Brewer, Mick B., Reyes, Marc Eric S., Pacquing, Ma. Criselda T., Buvár, Ágnes, Aruguete, Mara S., Orosz, Gábor, and Zsila, Ágnes
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LGBTQ+ people ,MASS media ,HETERONORMATIVITY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,FILIPINOS - Abstract
LGBTQ+ media representations that uphold heteronormativity, negativity, and homophobia can lead to perceptions of media as threatening. Drawing on intergroup threat theory, this study measured perceived media threats (in-person/group, realistic/symbolic) among English-speaking LGBTQ+ Filipinos (N = 817). The Perceived Media Threat Scale, developed for this study, showed a unidimensional structure with sound psychometric properties. LGBTQ+ identity challenges were found to be associated with an increased perception of threat from the media. However, perceived media threat was not associated with psychological well-being. The Perceived Media Threat Scale appears to be a sound measure of LGBTQ+ perceptions of media in the Philippines. Results suggest that perceived media threat may impact identity processes such as coming out but does not appear to be related to well-being in the LGBTQ + community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Does working from home work? That depends on the home.
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Stroom, Martijn, Eichholtz, Piet, and Kok, Nils
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TELECOMMUTING ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,SATISFACTION ,OFFICE environment ,WORKING hours - Abstract
Working from home (WFH) has risen in popularity since the COVID-19 pandemic. There is an ongoing debate about the productivity implications of WFH, but the physical climate of the home office has received only limited attention. This paper investigates the effect of home office satisfaction and environment-improving behavior on productivity and burnout tendency for WFH employees. We surveyed over 1,000 Dutch WFH individuals about their home office and perceived WFH performance. We fit logistic regressions and structural equation models to investigate the effect of home office satisfaction and characteristics on self-reported productivity, burnout tendency, and willingness to continue WFH. Our results reveal that individual differences in WFH productivity are explained by heterogeneity in the physical home office environment. Higher satisfaction with home office factors is significantly associated with increased productivity and decreased burnout tendency. We continue by showing that more ventilation during working hours is associated with increased productivity, willingness to continue WFH, and burnout resilience. This effect is fully mediated by satisfaction with the home office. We find that higher home office satisfaction is associated with WFH success and air-quality-improving behavior is associated with higher satisfaction. Our results underline a holistic perspective such that investing in a healthy and objectively measured physical climate is a key aspect of the bright future of working from home. The move from the work office to the home office needs to be accompanied by careful design and investment in the quality of the office and its climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Linking Perceived Risk of Public Health Emergency to Psychological Distress among Chinese College Students: The Chain Mediation Role of Balanced Time Perspective and Negative Coping Styles.
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Chang, Biru, Zhu, Shengqiang, Xie, Qian, and Dai, Yanghui
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- 2024
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22. Trends and factors influencing the mental health of college students in the post-pandemic: four consecutive cross-sectional surveys.
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Yinhai Chen, Xiong Ke, Jinfeng Liu, Jun Du, Jiali Zhang, Xuan Jiang, Tong Zhou, and Xiao Xiao
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MENTAL health of college students ,MENTAL depression ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL healing - Abstract
Background: The long-term impact of COVID-19 on the mental health and well-being of college students, specifically trends over time after full removal of COVID-19 restrictions, has not been well-studied. Methods: Four consecutive cross-sectional surveys were conducted in December 2022 (N = 689), March 2023 (N = 456), June 2023 (N = 300), and November 2023 (N = 601) at a university in Sichuan Province, China. Results: The proportion of students with COVID-19 panic decreased from 95.1 to 77.3% (p < 0.001). The prevalence of moderate anxiety and above decreased from 18 to 13.6% (p < 0.001), and the prevalence of moderate and above depression decreased from 33.1 to 28.1% (p < 0.001), while the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) increased from 21.5 to 29.6% (p < 0.005). Further, the proportion of suicidal thoughts increased from 7.7 to 14.8% (p < 0.001). Suicidal thoughts and self-injuries were significantly associated with COVID-19 panic, depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Students who reported being in close contact with COVID-19 patients in the past were more likely to develop PTSD. Further, COVID-19-induced panic was a risk factor for self-injury. Conclusion: One year after the COVID-19 pandemic, the overall mental health of college students was not optimal. Hence, we can conclude that the longterm impacts of COVID-19 on the mental health of college students may have already occurred. To mitigate this impact and prepare for the next major public health event, strengthening college students' mental health curricula and promoting healthy behaviors among college students should be a priority for universities and education authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Perspectives on climate change and infectious disease outbreaks: is the evidence there?
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Charnley, Gina E. C. and Kelman, Ilan
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MEDICAL climatology ,CLIMATE change ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,EFFECT of human beings on climate change ,SCIENTIFIC communication ,DISEASE outbreaks - Abstract
The accelerated warming of the planet caused by anthropogenic climate change is very concerning, as its impacts have the potential to be broad and its effects widespread. One climate change impact with significant interest from scientists, politicians, the media and the general public, is the proposed changes to infectious disease dynamics. Climate change has the potential to alter disease transmission through expansion to naive populations or by worsening risk factors. However, limitations exist in our ability to forecast the climate and disease, including how we incorporate changes in human behaviour and how we attribute climate/weather events solely to an infectious disease outcome. Broad statements about the impact of the climate on infectious disease may not be helpful, as these relationships are highly complex and likely lead to an oversimplification. The interdisciplinary field of climate-health research has the attention of those outside of science, and it is the responsibility of those involved to communicate attribution on an evidence basis, for better scientific communication and public spending. The uncertainty around the impacts of climate change is a call for action, to prevent pushing the Earth's systems into the unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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24. Exploring the Singapore general population's trust in COVID-19 information from different sources and its association with perceived risk of infection during the pandemic.
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Devi, Fiona, Chin Wee Tan, Bernard, Shafie, Saleha, Yun Jue Zhang, Shahwan, Shazana, Satghare, Pratika, Siow Ann Chong, and Subramaniam, Mythily
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- 2024
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25. Community-dwelling older adults' perspectives on health risks: a qualitative study exploring anxieties, priorities, and expectations in ageing.
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Zhai, Shaoqi, Zhang, Zhiying, Zhang, Ruyi, Peng, Yingchun, Zhang, Jiaying, Zhang, Yiyao, Jin, Qilin, Zhou, Jiaojiao, and Chen, Jingjing
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OLDER people ,ANXIETY ,DISEASE incidence ,INTEGRATIVE medicine ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: With the conflict between the promise of ageing in health and longevity and the limited availability of health resources and social support, older adults in China inevitably experience anxieties surrounding health risks. This study aims to investigate how older adults perceive the health risks that come with getting older, explore the degree to which health risks affect older adults, and advocate for active engagement in practices for managing health risks. Methods: Using purposive sampling, three districts of Beijing (Xicheng District, Fengtai District, and Daxing District, respectively) were selected for the research. Qualitative semi-structured and in-depth interviews were conducted with 70 community-dwelling older adults who participated in the study. Data were extracted and analyzed based on a thematic framework approach. Results: Three main themes were identified: (i) the anxieties of older adults concerning health risks in ageing; (ii) the priorities of older adults for health risk management in ageing; (iii) the expectations of older adults for health risk management in ageing. The primary health concerns among older adults included disease incidence and function decline. It was found that basic health management emerged as a critical need for older adults to mitigate health risks. Moreover, it was observed that healthcare support for older adults from familial, institutional, and governmental levels exhibited varying degrees of inadequacy. Conclusions: The primary source of anxieties among older adults regarding health risks predominantly stems from a perceived sense of health deprivation. It is often compounded by persistent barriers to primary care of priorities in managing health risks among older adults. In addition, the expectations of older adults for health risk management emphasize the necessity for integrated care approaches. Therefore, further research should give priority to the prevention and management of health risks, aim to reduce anxieties, provide integrated care to meet the primary needs and expectations of older adults, and ultimately strive toward the overarching goal of promoting health and longevity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Motivating Protective Behavior against COVID-19: Fear Versus Hope.
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Sand, Gregor and Bristle, Johanna
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FEAR ,AROUSAL (Physiology) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SURVEYS ,HEALTH behavior ,COMMUNICATION ,EPIDEMICS ,COVID-19 ,HOPE ,REGRESSION analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
Objectives: Based on protection motivation theory, we investigate how indicators of threat perception (perceived severity, perceived vulnerability, and fear arousal) and coping appraisal (hope) are associated with older people's motivation to engage in protective behavior after the outbreak of COVID-19. Methods: We use multivariate regression analyses with a sample of 40,282 individuals from 26 countries participating in the SHARE Corona Survey. Results: We find that 15% of all respondents stayed home completely—mainly the oldest and vulnerable people with prior health risk conditions. On average, older Europeans responded strongly to the recommended protective behavior measures (6 out of 7 measures adopted). Among the threat perception indicators, fear arousal is the main motivator for protective behavior, whereas the coping appraisal indicator hope shows an equally strong association. Discussion: Given the negative health effects of fear, our findings may help evaluate and revise governmental policy responses and communication strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Understanding e-satisfaction, continuance intention, and e-loyalty toward mobile payment application during COVID-19: an investigation using the electronic technology continuance model.
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Al Amin, Md., Muzareba, Abureza M., Chowdhury, Imtiaz Uddin, and Khondkar, Mubina
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MOBILE commerce ,CUSTOMER loyalty ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MOBILE apps ,HEALTH Belief Model ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
This research examined the determinants of e-satisfaction, continuance intention, and e-loyalty regarding the use of mobile payment applications (MPAs). It developed and validated the electronic technology continuance model (e-TCM) integrating a psychological factor (perceived threats), e-satisfaction, circumstantial factor (perceived anxiety), and the dimensions of quality. Using a questionnaire, data was collected from 455 respondents and analyzed using structural equation modeling. The influences of information quality, service quality, system quality, perceived usefulness, and confirmation on both e-satisfaction and continuance intention are found positive. However, perceived threats and perceived anxiety do not influence e-satisfaction but influence continuance intention. Moreover, e-satisfaction positively impacts continuance intention and e-loyalty; and continuance intention positively impacts e-loyalty. This research evidences the roles of perceived threat, e-satisfaction, perceived anxiety, and the dimensions of quality on customers' e-satisfaction, continuance intention and e-loyalty, using the integrated framework comprising the health belief model, expectation–confirmation model, and information systems success model. The findings of this research can guide MPA services providers, online businesses, industry analysts, suburban consumers, and respective government authorities when MPA usage is concerned during any unprecedented crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Determining Factors Influencing Filipinos' Behavioral Protection against COVID: Integrating Extended Protection Motivation Theory, Theory of Planned Behavior, and Ergonomic Appraisal.
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Gumasing, Ma. Janice J., Malabuyoc, Frankern Luis S., Ong, Ardvin Kester S., and Saflor, Charmine Sheena
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COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ,FILIPINOS ,PLANNED behavior theory ,PARTIAL least squares regression - Abstract
This study examined the perceived protective behavior of Filipinos towards COVID-19. It utilized the extended protection motivation theory (PMT) and theory of planned behavior (TPB) models with the integration of ergonomic appraisal, applying partial least square structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) to determine the factors affecting the protective behavior of Filipinos against COVID-19. A questionnaire was developed and distributed to 3000 Filipino citizens to measure the factors and their relationships. Results showed that understanding COVID-19 significantly influences the Filipinos' perceived virus severity and vulnerability. In turn, perceived severity, self-efficacy, attitude, and subjective norms were the significant factors that affected the behavioral intention, impacting protective behavior. In addition, cognitive and macro ergonomics have been found to be the factors that influence the protective behavior of Filipinos against COVID-19. Thus, the study's findings can be used as a framework for developing pandemic response initiatives that aim to inform and educate Filipinos, especially those who do not have the privilege of accessing information. Lastly, the outcome of this study can be used as a theoretical framework for future researchers who aim to conduct a study in a similar discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Factors influencing risk perception during Public Health Emergencies of International Concern (PHEIC): a scoping review.
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Yin, Jason Dean-Chen and Lui, Juliana Nga-Man
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RISK perception ,PUBLIC opinion ,WORLD health ,PUBLIC health ,CINAHL database - Abstract
The unknownness and dread potential of a risk event shapes its perceived risk. A public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) declaration by the World Health Organisation (WHO) is a signal for such an event. Understanding perceived risk then shapes risk-avoiding behaviours, important for health prevention. The review aims to consolidate the determinants of risk perception during a PHEIC, underscoring the need for grounding in context and theory. Studies published from 2010 until end-2020, searching PubMed, PsycINFO, MedlinePlus, PubPsych, and CINAHL, were included. Studies with only biological conceptualisations of risk, or no association to risk perception, were excluded. A total of 65 studies were included. Quality of the cross-sectional studies was assessed using Newcastle Ottawa Scale (NOS), yielding an average of 5.4 stars (out of 10). Factors were classified into three broad categories – individual, contextual, and media. Individual risk factors include emotions; beliefs, trust, and perceptions; immutable physical traits (sex, age, ethnicity); mutable traits (education, income, etc.); and knowledge, with no definitive correlation to risk perception. Contextual traits include pandemic experience, time, and location, with only time negatively correlated to risk perception. Media traits include exposure, attention, and framing of media, with no clear association to risk perception. One limitation is excluding a portion of COVID-19 studies due to censoring. Still, this lack of consensus highlights the need to better conceptualise "risk perception". Specifying the context and timing is also important since jurisdictions experience different outbreaks depending on outbreak histories. Using theories to ground risk perception research assists with these tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Dark Triad and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: the role of conspiracy beliefs and risk perception.
- Author
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Giancola, Marco, Palmiero, Massimiliano, and D'Amico, Simonetta
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CONSPIRACY theories ,VACCINE hesitancy ,NARCISSISM ,RISK perception ,COVID-19 vaccines ,HUMAN behavior ,VACCINE effectiveness - Abstract
With the spread of the Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the mass vaccination plan represents the primary weapon to control the infection curve. Unfortunately, vaccine hesitancy also spread out worldwide. This led to exploring the critical factors that prevent vaccination from improving the efficacy of vaccine campaigns. In the present study, the role of the Dark Triad (psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and narcissism) in vaccine hesitancy was investigated, considering the sequential mediating effects of conspiracy beliefs and risk perception. Via a cross-sectional design, the study was conducted with 210 participants surveyed using an online questionnaire to assess the Dark Triad, vaccine hesitancy, conspiracy beliefs, risk perception, and a set of demographic and socio-cultural control variables. Results showed that conspiracy beliefs and risk perception fully mediated the association between the Dark Triad and vaccine hesitancy. This finding suggested that albeit personality accounts for individual differences in human behaviour, vaccine hesitancy is also affected by irrational and false beliefs that, in turn, weaken the risk perception associated with COVID-19. Implications and future research directions were discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Causal effect of health belief model constructs in predicting anxiety in health workers: An insight from Indonesia during COVID-19 pandemic.
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Ayuningrum, Ika Yuli and Sudaryanto, Wahyu Tri
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- 2024
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32. COVID-19 anxiety, psychological well-being and preventive behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic in Latin America and the Caribbean: relationships and explanatory model.
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Caycho-Rodríguez, Tomás, Tomás, José M., Valencia, Pablo D., Ventura-León, José, Vilca, Lindsey W., Carbajal-León, Carlos, Reyes-Bossio, Mario, White, Michel, Rojas-Jara, Claudio, Polanco-Carrasco, Roberto, Gallegos, Miguel, Cervigni, Mauricio, Martino, Pablo, Palacios, Diego Alejandro, Moreta-Herrera, Rodrigo, Samaniego-Pinho, Antonio, Rivera, Marlon Elías Lobos, Figares, Andrés Buschiazzo, Puerta-Cortés, Diana Ximena, and Corrales-Reyes, Ibraín Enrique
- Abstract
This study assesses the relationship between COVID-19 anxiety and subjective well-being in terms of the mediating role of COVID-19 preventive behaviors. Additionally, the contribution of sociodemographic factors (sex and age) and risk perception on COVID-19 anxiety and its potential measurement invariance was tested in 5655 participants from 12 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. A mixture of both latent and observable variables were analyzed using a system of structural equations. The Coronavirus Anxiety Scale (CAS), Preventive COVID-19 Infection Behaviors Scale (PCIBS) and single-item measures were used to assess the perceived probability of death, perceived severity and concern about transmitting COVID-19. The results indicated that there is a significant and relevant direct effect of COVID-19 anxiety on participants' well-being. Furthermore, COVID-19 anxiety significantly predicted both preventive behavior (β =.29, p <.01) and well-being (β = –.32, p <.01). The effects of COVID anxiety and preventive behavior explained 9.8% of the variance in well-being (R-square =.098); whereas, 8.4% of the variance in preventive behavior was associated with COVID anxiety (R-square =.084). Likewise, perceived likelihood of death from COVID, perceived severity of COVID, and concerns about COVID transmission were positively related to anxiety. Age was negatively related to anxiety, with men being less anxious than women. The results are invariant by country, i.e., the broad relationships found in the combined sample are also present in each individual country. The findings indicate that, although the exact relationships between variables may vary between countries, there are enough similarities to provide useful information about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in each of the countries included in the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. The longitudinal relation between time perspective and preventive behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic: The mediating role of risk perception.
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Zancu, Simona Alexandra, Măirean, Cornelia, and Diaconu-Gherasim, Loredana R.
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Understanding psychological factors and the mechanisms involved in compliance with recommended preventive behaviors against COVID-19 is important for effective public health strategies. Time perspective was previously linked with risk perception and health-related behaviors, but it has not been explored in the context of infectious diseases. Furthermore, little is known about the explaining mechanisms that may link time perspective with adoption of preventive behaviors against health threats. The aim of the present study was to examine the longitudinal relations between time perspectives and COVID-19 risk perception and preventive behaviors. Using a six-month longitudinal design, we explored the mediating role of risk perception on the relations between the Zimbardo's time perspectives, and preventive behaviors to protect from COVID-19. Time perspectives and COVID-19 risk perception were assessed after the lock-down (May 2020) and preventive behaviors were reported after six months (December 2020) via online surveys in a sample of 460 Romanian young adults, aged 18 to 66 years (Mage = 25.53, 87.8% women). Path analysis revealed that risk perception (i.e., perceived severity of COVID-19) mediated the relations of past negative, positive and negative future time perspectives with adoption of preventive behaviors. Our findings highlight that risk perception is an important mechanism in explaining the relation between time perspectives and preventive behaviors against major health-threats such as COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Trust as a catalyst: revealing the impact of government trust and professional trust on public health policy compliance during a pandemic.
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Chen, Guobang, Zhang, Hua, Hu, Yue, and Luo, Chunyan
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HEALTH policy ,TRUST ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MARRIED women ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
Background: Existing research has extensively explored the relationship between government trust and compliance behaviour, but significant controversies exist. Some studies suggest a strong positive correlation between the two. Other studies have found that government trust hinders compliance behaviour. However, during the pandemic, the effectiveness of public health policies largely depends on the public's compliance with these policies. To examine the aforementioned controversies, this study utilizes survey data on the Chinese population during the COVID-19 period to explore the relationship between compliance with public health policies and government trust. Methods: The study conducted a questionnaire survey of 1,395 individuals from 25 provinces in China from mid-November to mid-December 2022. Firstly, we categorized the public's compliance behaviour with public health policies based on the results of factor analysis. Subsequently, we examined the impact of government trust and professional trust on compliance behaviour with public health policies by constructing a structural equation model. Results: Based on the results of factor analysis, we classified public adherence to public health policies into protective compliance and restrictive compliance. Results from the structural equation model show a positive correlation between the public's trust in the government and both protective and restrictive compliance, with a stronger influence on protective compliance. Government trust also exerts a positive impact on restrictive compliance behaviour through professional trust. Additionally, the study indicates a significant positive correlation between the public's professional trust and restrictive compliance, while it does not significantly affect protective compliance. Moreover, the public from rural areas demonstrates a greater willingness to adhere to both types of public health policies. Married individuals exhibit a stronger inclination toward protective compliance, while females show a stronger tendency toward restrictive compliance. Conclusion: The study revealed a significant positive impact of government trust and professional trust on compliance behaviour with public health policies during the COVID-19 pandemic, refuting any negative correlation between government trust and compliance behaviour. Normative motivations for compliance behaviour had a substantial impact on adherence. These findings offer valuable insights for future public health crisis management and public policy formulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Exploring the Spanish Tourists' Intentions to Travel to Zones That Have a Low-Impact of COVID-19 by Taking into Account Their Cognitive and Affective Risk Perceptions About the Pandemic.
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Álvarez-García, Begoña, Monje-Amor, Ariadna, and Abeal Vázquez, José Pablo
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TOURISTS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TOURIST attractions ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
In the current context in which tourism is beginning to recover, this study examines the worldwide trend of tourists traveling to destinations with a low impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in a country such as Spain, which is highly dependent on tourism activity. By employing the SEM methodology and an extended theory of planned behavior (TPB), which includes the cognitive and affective dimensions of perceived risk about the pandemic and past behavior, the results show the positive effect that past behavior and the core variables of the TPB have on the behavioral intentions of Spanish tourists, despite the negative impact that their cognitive risk perception has on these core variables. The study's findings have useful practical implications for tourism authorities and stakeholders in Spain and other countries that are also highly dependent on tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. THE DEVELOPMENT OF COVID-19 BRIEF ANXIETY SCALE IN OMAN.
- Author
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Khalaf, Mustafa Ali
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CRONBACH'S alpha ,DATA analysis ,DIFFERENTIAL item functioning (Research bias) ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICAL sampling ,ANXIETY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,FACTOR analysis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) - Published
- 2024
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37. Development of Respiratory Infection Prevention and Control Self-Efficacy Scale for Adults.
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Yoo, Hana and Kim, Namhee
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INFECTION prevention ,INFECTION control ,RESPIRATORY infections ,LITERATURE reviews ,TEST validity - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to develop a scale for respiratory infection prevention and control self-efficacy (R-PACS) to measure self-efficacy in the prevention and control of the spread of respiratory infections among adults and to confirm the applicability of the developed scale by testing its validity and reliability. Methods: This methodological study was conducted in two phases. During the first phase, the R-PACS scale was developed after conducting a thorough literature review, content validity, and a pilot test. In the second phase, its validity and reliability were verified against 210 university students in Korea. The criterion validity of the developed R-PACS scale was tested using the correlation with resilience scale. Item analysis, explanatory factor analysis, and convergent and discriminant validity analyses were conducted in order to verify construct validity. Furthermore, Cronbach's α was used to verify internal consistency reliability. Results: The final version of the R-PACS scale comprises 4 factors and 16 items rated on a 5-point Likert scale. Higher scores are interpreted as higher levels of self-efficacy in the prevention and control of respiratory infection. The R-PACS scale exhibited good content validity, construct validity, criterion validity, and reliability. The correlation coefficient of the four factors was ≥.4, confirming the validity of item convergence; meanwhile, the Cronbach's α coefficient for the final 16 items of the developed scale was 0.923, verifying reliability. This scale consists of four factors: "environmental management", "contact restrictions", "general infection prevention and control", and "early detection". Conclusion: The applicability of the R-PACS scale exhibited acceptable validity and reliability. This scale can be utilized to assess and evaluate the degree of self-efficacy in the prevention and control of respiratory infections among adults. Data obtained using this scale can be utilized for preparing health behavior change and health promotion programs, and practical policies for preventing respiratory infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. Prevalence and associated risk factors of chlamydia and gonorrhoea infections among men who have sex with men in Durban, South Africa.
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Mofolorunsho, Kehinde C., Mabaso, Nonkululeko, Nundlall, Nikita, Nightingale, Apiwe, Nyirenda, Makandwe, and Abbai, Nathlee
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- 2024
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39. Knowledge, attitude, and practice of dental health professionals toward dental impression disinfection protocol during the COVID-19 pandemic in Saudi Arabia– a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Binassfour, Abdullah Salman, Baseer, Mohammad Abdul, and Ingle, Navin Anand
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COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL personnel ,DENTAL impressions ,PRACTICE of dentistry ,SOCIAL media ,DENTAL students - Abstract
Background: Despite the updated guidelines on dental impression disinfection protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic, adherence to such procedures has not been studied among dental health professionals in Saudi Arabia. Understanding DHPs' knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding COVID-19 is crucial in assessing a willingness to adhere to the recommendations provided by health authorities in mitigating the spread of COVID-19 via dental impressions impacting patient safety and infection control measures. Hence, this study aimed to assess dental health professionals' (DHPs) knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) toward dental impression disinfection protocol during the COVID-19 pandemic in Saudi Arabia. Methods: A cross-sectional study using an online survey was conducted from 14 December 2022 to 21 March 2023 among practicing dentists, dental assistants (DA), dental laboratory technicians (DT), and dental hygienists in Saudi Arabia. A validated and reliable questionnaire that consisted of 38 items along with demographic variables was prepared to collect the data. Using Google Forms, a questionnaire link was prepared and shared on the social media platforms of DHPs in Saudi Arabia. A descriptive analysis was conducted to report the percentages and frequencies. The mean knowledge, attitude, and practice scores were analyzed using an Independent t-test, ANOVA, and Pearson's correlation tests. Results: A total of 718 DHPs voluntarily participated in the survey. Most of the DHPs exhibited average knowledge 392 (54.6%), neutral attitudes 393(54.7%), and adequate 549 (76.5%) practice towards dental impression disinfection protocol. The mean knowledge score differed significantly across nationality (p = 0.013), type of DHPs (p < 0.001), qualification (p = 0.045), and experience (p = 0.028) of the study participants. Significant differences in attitude towards impression disinfection were observed in different age groups (p = 0.002), qualifications (p = 0.015), and experiences (p = 0.024) of the DHPs. Similarly, practice varied across different age groups (p = 0.010), nationality (p = 0.013), type of DHPs (p = 0.019), qualification (p = 0.044), experience (p = 0.041), and COVID-19 Infection (p = 0.006). Moreover, a significant positive correlation between knowledge-attitude (r = 0.258, p < 0.01), knowledge-practice (r = 0.283, p < 0.01), and attitude-practice (r = 0.196, p < 0.01) was observed. Conclusion: DHPs considered in this study demonstrated average knowledge and attitudes toward impression disinfection, requiring improvement through continuous dental education and training. However, they displayed acceptable dental impression disinfection practices during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is highly recommended that continuing education programs should mainly reinforce the knowledge of sodium hypochlorite, iodophor, and phenolics and their concentrations to be used as an impression disinfectant. Additionally, it should focus on techniques of disinfecting elastomeric, hydrocolloid, zinc oxide and eugenol, and impression compound materials to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 based on Saudi ministry of health guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Knowledge, Attitude, and Practices (KAPs) on COVID-19 of junior and senior high school students.
- Author
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Origenes, Ritchelle W. and Alejandro, Blanca A.
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JUNIOR high school students ,HIGH school students ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,INCOME - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, students faced increased risk of contracting the virus due to the relaxation of health protocols by the Philippine government and the authorization of face-to-face instruction in schools by the Department of Education. There is little data on basic education school students' awareness of COVID-19 in the Philippines, particularly in Cebu City. A cross-sectional descriptive-correlational research design was utilized to determine junior and senior high school students' knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding COVID-19. In this study, a survey questionnaire was used to compare and attempt to identify relationships between the demographic profile of students and their KAPs regarding COVID-19. This study also investigated the relationships between students' KAPs. JHS and SHS students exhibited outstanding KAPs for COVID-19. Students' demographic characteristics, including grade level and family income, were significantly associated with their KAPs toward the disease. However, their gender was not significantly associated with their KAPs. There was a significant relationship between students' COVID-19 KAPs. It is imperative that the DepEd develop strategies and programs to combat the situation due to pandemic and prepare for similar situations in future. With the aid of curriculum designers, science educators must adapt the science education curriculum to address current and future health concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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41. Associations between Risk Assessments of COVID-19, Golf Club's Risk Management, and Golf Participation.
- Author
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J. Lucy Lee, Sungho Cho, Dae Hee Kwak, and June Won
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COVID-19 ,GOLF ,RECREATIONAL sports ,RISK perception ,RECREATION ,RISK assessment - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on leisure and sport consumption. While many sports and recreational activities, including sports, were suspended to contain the spread of the virus, golf presented an opportunity for individuals to engage in outdoor activity where social distancing was possible. We investigated the importance of risk perception and safety management practices in relation to repeated leisure activity participation among recreational golfers via online survey (N = 268). The results indicated that recreational golfers' perceived risk of leisure activity participation and perceived managerial safety climate had a significant effect, while cognitive and affective COVID-19 risk perceptions did not have a significant influence on recreational golfer' revisit intention. The findings provide empirical evidence on how recreational golfer perceived the domainspecific risks associated with COVID-19 and managerial safety climate influence their sports and recreational activity consumption decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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42. Evaluating Teachers' Workplace Climate and Anxiety Response during the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Information Seeking Platforms.
- Author
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Srem-Sai, Medina, Quansah, Frank, Agormedah, Edmond Kwesi, Hagan Jr., John Elvis, and Schack, Thomas
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COVID-19 pandemic ,ANXIETY diagnosis ,SCHOOL environment ,EDUCATIONAL counseling ,WORK environment ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
The COVID-19 disease affected the school workplace climate for teachers and led to psychological consequences. However, it is not clear how the workplace climate affected the anxiety levels of teachers. This study assessed the connection between workplace climate and COVID-19-related anxiety among senior high school (SHS) teachers during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study further examined the moderating role of professional and social media platform use on the relationship between workplace climate and COVID-19-related anxiety among teachers. Through a cross-sectional survey design, 395 high school teachers were conveniently sampled from various schools in the Central Region of Ghana. A questionnaire was used to survey participants, and the obtained data were analysed using descriptive statistics as well as simple linear regression and moderation analyses with Hayes' PROCESS. This study revealed a negative association between workplace climate and anxiety. The relationship between workplace climate and anxiety was contingent on social media use but not professional platform use. Therefore, the consumption of unscrutinised COVID-19-related information on social media heightened fear and anxiety among teachers, even in the midst of a safe workplace environment. An effective strategy against teachers' COVID-19-related anxiety required the provision of accurate science-driven information about the virus. School counselling psychologists, school welfare officers, and school health coordinators are encouraged to collaborate towards designed interventions that promote a safe working environment and the mental health of teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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43. "Death and Love Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic": Effects of Pathogen Threats on Online Dating and Social Distancing From Life-History Strategy Perspectives.
- Author
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Jin, Seunga Venus, Ryu, Ehri, and Muqaddam, Aziz
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DEATH & psychology ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,LIFE course approach ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL theory ,SOCIAL media ,MOBILE apps ,FEAR ,SHOOTINGS (Crime) ,LIFE history interviews ,ONLINE social networks ,LOVE ,SOCIAL distancing ,DATING (Social customs) ,ANXIETY ,INTENTION ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL illness ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
Drawing from the terror management theory (TMT) and evolutionary perspectives of Life-History Strategy, a between-subject online experiment examined the interaction effects of pre-existing death anxiety, fear-inducing media content (coronavirus threat vs. gun violence threat vs. low threat mental disorder), and intrasexual competition for mates on online dating intentions and social distancing intentions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results indicate the interaction effects of participants' pre-experimental death anxiety and different types of fear-inducing media content on perceived fear and intention to use online dating websites/apps as well as the interaction effects of pre-experimental intrasexual competitiveness and fear-inducing media content on social distancing intention in the context of online dating. Theoretical contributions to the terror management literature and practical implications for the online dating industry are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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44. Coping, health anxiety, and stress among health professionals during Covid-19, Cape Coast, Ghana.
- Author
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Nkyi, Anthony K. and Baaba, Bridgette
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL personnel ,CAPES (Coasts) ,PHYSICIANS' assistants ,ANXIETY - Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate coping strategies, health anxiety and stress among healthcare professionals in selected hospitals in the Cape Coast Metropolis during the Covid 19 pandemic. This study adopted the Descriptive survey design. The Multistage sampling technique was used to select 322 health professionals. The health professionals included Medical Officers, Physician Assistants and Nurses. Data were gathered using the Health Anxiety Inventory (HAI-SF), Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), and the Brief-COPE Inventory. Analyses were conducted using mean and standard deviation, ANOVA as well as Independent Samples t-test. Results indicate that Health professionals adopted diverse coping strategies ranging from positive to negative coping style to overcome the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Results also indicate that coping strategies significantly influenced health anxiety levels of health professionals, and that Active Coping is a significant determinant of stress among health professionals. Male health professionals had significantly more health anxiety than females. However, gender was not a significant factor in the experiences of stress. Lastly, age of health professionals does not determine the type of coping strategy they adopted during the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
45. Beyond SARS-CoV-2: epidemiological surveillance of respiratory viruses in Jalisco, Mexico.
- Author
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Pedroza-Uribe, Isaac Murisi, Vega Magaña, Natali, Muñoz-Valle, José Francisco, Peña-Rodriguez, Marcela, Carranza-Aranda, Ahtziri Socorro, Sánchez-Sánchez, Rocío, Venancio-Landeros, Alberto Anthony, García-González, Octavio Patricio, Zavala-Mejía, Jacob Jecsan, Ramos-Solano, Moisés, Viera-Segura, Oliver, and García-Chagollán, Mariel
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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46. Compliance with World Health Organization COVID-19 preventive behaviors in rural counties in Western Kenya: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Nyaranga, Caleb, Wilberforce, Cholo, and Njororai, Fletcher
- Subjects
HAND washing ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,SOCIAL distancing ,DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Introduction: the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended various measures to tackle COVID-19, and were adopted by many governments, targeting behavior change among citizens to lower the transmission. There was a paucity of data on the patterns of compliance with different measures within individuals and whether people adhere to all recommended measures or cautiously prefer few but not others. Understanding compliance behaviors and associated factors is important for developing interventions to increase compliance. Methods: cross-sectional study was conducted among adults in the western region of Kenya. A sample of 806 participants was selected using a stratified sampling method. A structured questionnaire was used to gather data from the participants. Compliance was assessed with six behaviors: hand sanitation, proper hygiene, no handshaking, social distancing, and other guidelines. Latent analysis was used to identify behavioral patterns. Descriptive statistics were used to assess demographic characteristics, in terms of frequency distribution, and percentages. Multinomial logistic regression was used to assess the association between demographic characteristics and compliance level. Results: compliance was highest for masking (85.3%), and was lowest for social distancing (60.2%). The majority of participants were found to be full compliers (class 1: 40.5%), there was an increased probability of full compliance among those aged between 18-30 years (OR= 1.042; 95% CI: 0.307-13.052, p < 0.040) compared to those aged =70 Conclusion: using facemasks had the highest rate of compliance, followed by hand sanitization and proper hygiene. However, overall, the findings showed that while compliance with some protocol behaviors is high, individuals comply consistently across recommended compliance behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Risk Management Strategies: An Empirical Analysis of Strategies Employed by Tourism Business Managers in Plateau State, Nigeria during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Iirmdu, Tina Odinakachi and Donaldson, Ronnie
- Subjects
RISK management in business ,TOURISM ,COVID-19 pandemic ,STRATEGIC planning in business risk management - Abstract
The 'new normal' era of the COVID-19 pandemic had debilitating effects from a number of restrictions on businesses that have had a significant impact on the travel and hospitality sectors. Chaos theory is applied to investigate the risk management strategies employed by tourism business managers in Plateau State Nigeria, during the pandemic. Interview responses were subjected to qualitative analysis and the findings of this study are consistent with chaos theory. As risk management strategies for the survival of tourism businesses, order and new stability reemerged from a chaotic tourism crisis era. Due to their experiences with the epidemic, managers and owners of tourism-related enterprises decided to base their decisions on planned behaviour. The viewpoints and experiences of managers of tourism-related businesses are valuable sources for practical risk management strategies that can be used in the event of a pandemic. These are priceless resources that will help other tourism sector players comprehend and weigh their alternatives for handling such extraordinary situations in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "Contagious" brands: Are they safe from coronavirus?
- Author
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Bigne, Enrique, Simonetti, Aline, and Shih, Diana Y.W.
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to investigate how brand love and brand loyalty for three brands evolved during critical moments of the 2020 pandemic, and how they performed in the long run up to 2022. Design/methodology/approach: An online longitudinal study, including a survey and Twitter data for three brands: Corona Extra, with a direct semantic association with the word coronavirus; Virus Vodka, with an indirect association; Modelo Especial, with no association with the virus name but from the same company as Corona Extra. Findings: Despite external data indicating a harmful association between Corona Extra and coronavirus, this study's findings revealed that the brand maintained its brand love in the long run and increased brand loyalty during the critical moments of the pandemic. This study's data suggest that brand love and brand loyalty may be the underlying reasons for the increase in Corona Extra's brand equity during the pandemic. Originality/value: The COVID-19 pandemic created a highly stressful situation for consumers and brands. Some brands' names had unfortunate semantic similarities with the virus terminology, which became an additional stressor during that time. This study harnessed the opportunity to investigate brand love and brand loyalty during the pandemic at four points in 2020 and one in 2022. The authors also examined relevant Twitter data during 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Association of Age, Gender, and Education with Awareness and Perceived Threat Related to Pandemic among Indian Adults.
- Author
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Singh, Shweta, Singh, Nitika, Gupta, Pawan Kumar, and Dalal, Pronob Kumar
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COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,NONPROBABILITY sampling ,PANDEMICS - Abstract
Background: Novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has led to a state of a public health emergency. As studied in earlier pandemics, awareness and perceived threats regarding an infectious disease play an essential role in instigating preventative measures. This study attempted to assess the association of age, gender, and education with awareness and perceived threat during COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: An online survey was conducted using a semi-structured questionnaire using a nonprobability snowball sampling technique, and a dataset of 1068 participants was analyzed. Results: Age was significantly correlated with awareness, anxiety, and threat, with a positive correlation observed for awareness and a negative correlation observed for an overall perceived threat. On the other hand, education was correlated significantly only with awareness, and this correlation was positive. Conclusions: This study aimed to determine the vulnerable population in terms of age, gender, and years of education. The most susceptible sections of society are the youths, especially those with a low level of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Modeling Supply and Demand Dynamics of Vaccines against Epidemic-Prone Pathogens: Case Study of Ebola Virus Disease.
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Guttieres, Donovan, Diepvens, Charlot, Decouttere, Catherine, and Vandaele, Nico
- Subjects
EBOLA virus disease ,SUPPLY & demand ,VACCINATION ,EBOLA virus ,VACCINES - Abstract
Health emergencies caused by epidemic-prone pathogens (EPPs) have increased exponentially in recent decades. Although vaccines have proven beneficial, they are unavailable for many pathogens. Furthermore, achieving timely and equitable access to vaccines against EPPs is not trivial. It requires decision-makers to capture numerous interrelated factors across temporal and spatial scales, with significant uncertainties, variability, delays, and feedback loops that give rise to dynamic and unexpected behavior. Therefore, despite progress in filling R&D gaps, the path to licensure and the long-term viability of vaccines against EPPs continues to be unclear. This paper presents a quantitative system dynamics modeling framework to evaluate the long-term sustainability of vaccine supply under different vaccination strategies. Data from both literature and 50 expert interviews are used to model the supply and demand of a prototypical Ebolavirus Zaire (EBOV) vaccine. Specifically, the case study evaluates dynamics associated with proactive vaccination ahead of an outbreak of similar magnitude as the 2018–2020 epidemic in North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. The scenarios presented demonstrate how uncertainties (e.g., duration of vaccine-induced protection) and design criteria (e.g., priority geographies and groups, target coverage, frequency of boosters) lead to important tradeoffs across policy aims, public health outcomes, and feasibility (e.g., technical, operational, financial). With sufficient context and data, the framework provides a foundation to apply the model to a broad range of additional geographies and priority pathogens. Furthermore, the ability to identify leverage points for long-term preparedness offers directions for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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