Department of Anthropology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2009 Dec 3;4(12):e8032. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008032.
Since late April, 2009, a novel influenza virus A (H1N1), generally referred to as the "swine flu," has spread around the globe and infected hundreds of thousands of people. During the first few days after the initial outbreak in Mexico, extensive media coverage together with a high degree of uncertainty about the transmissibility and mortality rate associated with the virus caused widespread concern in the population. The spread of an infectious disease can be strongly influenced by behavioral changes (e.g., social distancing) during the early phase of an epidemic, but data on risk perception and behavioral response to a novel virus is usually collected with a substantial delay or after an epidemic has run its course.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we report the results from an online survey that gathered data (n = 6,249) about risk perception of the Influenza A(H1N1) outbreak during the first few days of widespread media coverage (April 28-May 5, 2009). We find that after an initially high level of concern, levels of anxiety waned along with the perception of the virus as an immediate threat. Overall, our data provide evidence that emotional status mediates behavioral response. Intriguingly, principal component analysis revealed strong clustering of anxiety about swine flu, bird flu and terrorism. All three of these threats receive a great deal of media attention and their fundamental uncertainty is likely to generate an inordinate amount of fear vis-a-vis their actual threat.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results suggest that respondents' behavior varies in predictable ways. Of particular interest, we find that affective variables, such as self-reported anxiety over the epidemic, mediate the likelihood that respondents will engage in protective behavior. Understanding how protective behavior such as social distancing varies and the specific factors that mediate it may help with the design of epidemic control strategies.
自 2009 年 4 月下旬以来,一种新型甲型流感病毒(通常称为“猪流感”)在全球范围内传播,感染了数十万人。在墨西哥最初爆发后的头几天,广泛的媒体报道以及对与该病毒相关的传染性和死亡率的高度不确定性引起了公众的广泛关注。传染病的传播可以在流行早期通过行为改变(例如,社交距离)得到强有力的控制,但有关对新型病毒的风险感知和行为反应的数据通常是在大流行发生后或在大流行结束后才收集到的。
方法/主要发现:在这里,我们报告了一项在线调查的结果,该调查在广泛的媒体报道(2009 年 4 月 28 日至 5 月 5 日)的最初几天内收集了有关甲型流感(H1N1)爆发的风险感知的数据(n=6249)。我们发现,在最初的高度关注之后,随着人们对病毒的即时威胁的感知减弱,焦虑水平也随之下降。总体而言,我们的数据提供了证据表明,情绪状态可以调节行为反应。有趣的是,主成分分析显示,对猪流感、禽流感和恐怖主义的焦虑程度存在强烈的聚类。所有这三种威胁都受到了大量媒体的关注,它们的根本不确定性很可能会对其实际威胁产生过多的恐惧。
结论/意义:我们的研究结果表明,受访者的行为以可预测的方式变化。特别有趣的是,我们发现,情感变量(例如,对疫情的自我报告焦虑)调节了受访者采取保护行为的可能性。了解保护行为(例如社交距离)的变化方式以及调节它的具体因素可能有助于设计传染病控制策略。