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Pandemic boredom: Little evidence that lockdown-related boredom affects risky public health behaviors across 116 countries

Authors :
Erin Corwin Westgate
Nick Buttrick
Yijun Lin
Gaelle El Helou
Maximilian Agostini
Jocelyn Belanger
Ben Gutzkow
Jannis Kreienkamp
Georgios Abakoumkin
Jamilah H. B. Abdul Khaiyom
Vjollca Ahmedi
Handan Akkas
Carlos A Almenara
Mohsin Atta
S C B
Sima Basel
Edona Berisha Kida
ALLAN B. I. BERNARDO
Phatthanakit Chobthamkit
Hoon-Seok Choi
Mioara Cristea
Sara Csaba
Kaja Damnjanović
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Center for Open Science, 2021.

Abstract

A variety of public officials have expressed concern that policies mandating collective public health behaviors (e.g., national/ regional “lockdown”) may result in behavioral fatigue that ultimately renders such policies ineffective. Boredom, specifically, has been singled out as one potential risk factor for non-compliance. We examined whether there was empirical evidence to support this concern during the COVID-19 pandemic in a large cross-national sample of 63,336 community respondents from 116 countries. Although boredom was higher in countries with more COVID-19 cases and countries that instituted more stringent lockdowns, such boredom did not predict longitudinal within-person decreases in social distancing behavior (or vice versa; n = 8031) in early spring and summer of 2020. Overall, we found little evidence that changes in boredom predict individual public health behaviors (handwashing, staying home, self-quarantining, avoiding crowds) over time, or that such behaviors had any reliable longitudinal effects on boredom itself. In summary, contrary to concerns, we found little evidence that boredom posed a public health risk during lockdown and quarantine.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a65c8337fee453790798083d271101ef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/78kma