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About:
Knowledge and behaviors toward COVID-19 among U.S. residents during the early days of the pandemic
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An Entity of Type :
schema:ScholarlyArticle
, within Data Space :
covidontheweb.inria.fr
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Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
title
Knowledge and behaviors toward COVID-19 among U.S. residents during the early days of the pandemic
Creator
Clements, John
source
MedRxiv
abstract
Abstract Objective: To test the hypothesis that knowledge of COVID-19 influences participation in different behaviors including self-reports of purchasing more goods than usual, attending large gatherings, and using medical masks. Methods: Cross-sectional online survey of 1,034 U.S. residents age 18+ conducted on March 17, 2020. Results: For every point increase in knowledge, the odds of participation in purchasing more goods (OR=0.88, 95% CI:0.81-0.95), attending large gatherings (OR=0.87, 95%CI: 0.81-0.93), and using medical masks (OR=0.56, 95% CI:0.50-0.62) decreased by 12%, 13%, and 44%, respectively. Gen X and Millennial participants had 56% to 76% higher odds, respectively, of increased purchasing behavior, compared to Baby Boomers. Results suggest politicization of response recommendations. Democrats had 30% lower odds of attending large gatherings (OR=0.70, 95% CI:0.50-0.97), and 48% lower odds of using medical masks (OR=0.52, 95% CI:0.34-0.78), compared to Republicans. Conclusions: This survey is one of the first attempts to study determinants of knowledge and behaviors in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. A national, coordinated effort at pandemic response may ensure better compliance with behavioral recommendations to address this public health emergency.
has issue date
2020-04-02
(
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bibo:doi
10.1101/2020.03.31.20048967
has license
medrxiv
sha1sum (hex)
16ffae6b21685dfcd71c62398ba65adefc9b5d44
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.31.20048967
resource representing a document's title
Knowledge and behaviors toward COVID-19 among U.S. residents during the early days of the pandemic
resource representing a document's body
covid:16ffae6b21685dfcd71c62398ba65adefc9b5d44#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'March 17'
named entity 'Baby Boomers'
named entity 'age'
named entity '95% CI'
named entity 'RECOMMENDATIONS'
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