Howard Matt C
The University of South Alabama, Mitchell College of Business, USA.
Pers Individ Dif. 2021 Feb 15;170:110417. doi: 10.1016/j.paid.2020.110417. Epub 2020 Oct 8.
Recent popular press authors have proposed that men are less likely to wear face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic. We investigate this notion in the current article by analyzing three extant datasets. We also assess the mediating effect of eight different face mask perceptions in the relation between gender and face mask wearing via the Face Mask Perceptions Scale. Across the three datasets, the sample-size weighted meta-analytic correlation between gender and face mask wearing was not statistically significant, and no face mask perception was a consistent mediator of this effect. Gender did have significant relations with two face mask perceptions, however. Men were more likely to perceive face masks as infringing on their independence, whereas women were more likely to perceive face masks as uncomfortable. Therefore, although gender does not relate to whether a person wears a face mask, it does relate to face mask perceptions. We offer several suggestions for research and practice from these results, such as the positioning of face mask wearing alongside passive health behaviors, the broader study of face mask perceptions' outcomes beyond face mask wearing, as well as the creation of interventions to target differing face mask perceptions across genders.
近期,大众媒体的作者们提出,在新冠疫情期间男性佩戴口罩的可能性较低。在当前文章中,我们通过分析三个现有数据集来研究这一观点。我们还通过口罩认知量表评估了八种不同口罩认知在性别与口罩佩戴之间关系中的中介作用。在这三个数据集中,性别与口罩佩戴之间的样本量加权元分析相关性无统计学意义,且没有一种口罩认知是这种效应的一致中介因素。然而,性别与两种口罩认知确实存在显著关系。男性更有可能认为口罩侵犯了他们的独立性,而女性更有可能认为口罩佩戴起来不舒服。因此,虽然性别与一个人是否佩戴口罩无关,但它与口罩认知有关。基于这些结果,我们为研究和实践提供了一些建议,比如将口罩佩戴与被动健康行为放在同等位置、更广泛地研究口罩认知除佩戴口罩之外的结果,以及制定针对不同性别口罩认知差异的干预措施。