Rural & Minority Health Research Center, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, USA.
J Rural Health. 2021 Jun;37(3):473-478. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12600. Epub 2021 Jun 7.
Risk mitigation behaviors are important for older adults, who experience increased mortality risk from COVID-19. We examined these reported behaviors among rural and urban community-dwelling adults aged 65 and older.
We analyzed public use files from the National Health and Aging Trends Study, which fielded a COVID survey from June to October, 2020, restricted to community-dwelling adults (n = 2,982). Eight behaviors were studied: handwashing, avoid touching face, mask wearing, limiting shopping, avoiding restaurants or bars, limiting gatherings, avoiding contact with those outside the household, and distancing. Residence was defined as urban (metropolitan county) or rural (nonmetropolitan county). Difference testing used Chi Square tests, with an alpha level of P = .05. Multivariable logistic regression was used to calculate adjusted odds ratios.
Rural residents constituted 18.8% (± Standard Error 3.6%) of the study population. In bivariate comparisons, rural older adults were less likely to report 5 of 8 studied behaviors: keep 6-foot distance (rural: 88.3% ±1.0%, urban 93.2% ±.08%), limit gatherings (rural 87.5% ±1.8%; urban 91.6% ±0.8%), avoid restaurants/bars (rural 85.3% ±1.9%, urban 89.6% ±0.8%), avoid touching face (rural 83.1% ±2.3%, urban 88.6%, 0.8%), and avoid contact with those outside the household (rural 80.4% ±2.4%, urban 86.2% ±1.0%). After adjusting for demographic characteristics, only maintaining a 6-foot distance remained lower among rural older adults (AOR 0.58, 95% CI: 0.42-0.81).
Within older adults, reported compliance with recommended behaviors to limit the spread of COVID-19 was high. Nonetheless, consistent rural shortfalls were noted. Findings highlight the need for rural-specific messaging strategies for future public health emergencies.
风险缓解行为对于老年人很重要,因为他们感染 COVID-19 后的死亡率会增加。我们研究了这些在农村和城市社区居住的 65 岁及以上老年人中报告的行为。
我们分析了国家健康老龄化趋势研究的公共使用文件,该研究于 2020 年 6 月至 10 月期间对 COVID 进行了调查,仅限于社区居住的成年人(n = 2982)。研究了八种行为:洗手、避免触摸面部、戴口罩、限制购物、避免餐厅或酒吧、限制聚会、避免与家庭以外的人接触以及保持距离。居住地点定义为城市(大都市县)或农村(非大都市县)。差异检验使用卡方检验,α 值为 P =.05。多变量逻辑回归用于计算调整后的优势比。
农村居民占研究人群的 18.8%(±标准误差 3.6%)。在双变量比较中,农村老年人不太可能报告 8 项研究行为中的 5 项:保持 6 英尺距离(农村:88.3% ±1.0%,城市:93.2% ±.08%)、限制聚会(农村:87.5% ±1.8%;城市:91.6% ±0.8%)、避免餐厅/酒吧(农村:85.3% ±1.9%,城市:89.6% ±0.8%)、避免触摸面部(农村:83.1% ±2.3%,城市:88.6%,0.8%)和避免与家庭以外的人接触(农村:80.4% ±2.4%,城市:86.2% ±1.0%)。在调整人口特征后,农村老年人保持 6 英尺距离的比例仍然较低(AOR 0.58,95%CI:0.42-0.81)。
在老年人中,报告的遵守限制 COVID-19 传播的建议行为的比例很高。尽管如此,仍注意到农村地区的持续不足。研究结果强调了未来公共卫生紧急情况下农村特定信息传递策略的必要性。