Papageorge Nicholas W, Zahn Matthew V, Belot Michèle, van den Broek-Altenburg Eline, Choi Syngjoo, Jamison Julian C, Tripodi Egon
Department of Economics, Johns Hopkins University, IZA and NBER, Balitmore, MD USA.
Department of Economics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD USA.
J Popul Econ. 2021;34(2):691-738. doi: 10.1007/s00148-020-00818-x. Epub 2021 Jan 14.
Given the role of human behavior in the spread of disease, it is vital to understand what drives people to engage in or refrain from health-related behaviors during a pandemic. This paper examines factors associated with the adoption of self-protective health behaviors, such as social distancing and mask wearing, at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in the USA. These behaviors not only reduce an individual's own risk of infection but also limit the spread of disease to others. Despite these dual benefits, universal adoption of these behaviors is not assured. We focus on the role of socioeconomic differences in explaining behavior, relying on data collected in April 2020 during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. The data include information on income, gender and race along with unique variables relevant to the current pandemic, such as work arrangements and housing quality. We find that higher income is associated with larger changes in self-protective behaviors. These gradients are partially explained by the fact that people with less income are more likely to report circumstances that make adopting self-protective behaviors more difficult, such as an inability to tele-work. Both in the USA and elsewhere, policies that assume universal compliance with self-protective measures-or that otherwise do not account for socioeconomic differences in the costs of doing so-are unlikely to be effective or sustainable.
鉴于人类行为在疾病传播中的作用,了解在大流行期间促使人们采取或避免与健康相关行为的因素至关重要。本文研究了在美国新冠疫情初期与采取自我保护健康行为(如保持社交距离和佩戴口罩)相关的因素。这些行为不仅降低了个人自身的感染风险,还限制了疾病向他人的传播。尽管有这些双重好处,但这些行为并不能确保被普遍采用。我们依靠2020年4月在新冠疫情初期收集的数据,重点研究社会经济差异在解释行为方面的作用。这些数据包括收入、性别和种族信息,以及与当前疫情相关的独特变量,如工作安排和住房质量。我们发现,较高收入与自我保护行为的较大变化相关。收入较低的人更有可能报告使采取自我保护行为更加困难的情况,如无法远程工作,这一事实部分解释了这些梯度。在美国和其他地方,那些假定人们会普遍遵守自我保护措施的政策——或者那些没有考虑到这样做的成本存在社会经济差异的政策——不太可能有效或可持续。