Department of Health Behavior and Social Medicine, West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Chengdu, China.
Department of Communication Studies, College of Liberal Arts, California State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2022 Jan 28;9:756933. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.756933. eCollection 2021.
Self-protective behaviors, such as handwashing and mask-wearing, are effective to reduce the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), but few studies have focused on women living in rural areas who bear the brunt of the impacts of the pandemic due to their economic and social vulnerabilities. This study explores what prompted the adoption of self-protective behaviors in response to COVID-19 among women living in rural areas of western China.
The study sample consisted of 1,524 women from 116 townships across 10 counties in rural western China. We collected data in May and August 2020 on women's socioeconomic characteristics, exposure to COVID-19-related information, psychological response to COVID-19, and adoption of self-protective behaviors. Structural equation modeling (SEM) analyses were conducted to analyze the relations among the variables.
During the lockdown, 1,221 (80.12%) of the 1,524 women in the study sample reported wearing a mask every time when they went outside and 1,021 (66.99%) reported handwashing with soap every time after they came home. Perceived efficacy had the strongest association with self-protective behaviors (β = 0.38; < 0.001). Receiving public health guidance (β = 0.18; < 0.001) was indirectly associated with more self-protective behaviors via greater perceived efficacy. Higher socioeconomic status was also directly associated with increased adoption of self-protective behaviors (β = 0.24; < 0.001). Other variables, such as receiving surveillance and risk information, communication channels, perceived risks, and fear, were indirectly associated with the adoption of self-protective behaviors with smaller effect sizes (all β were lower than 0.10).
Not all women were able to adopt self-protective behaviors, such as mask-wearing and handwashing, during the COVID-19 pandemic in western China. To further encourage behavioral changes in response to public health crises, the government should develop clear and actionable guidelines and adopt targeted health communication strategies to reach the most disadvantaged groups of society. These findings may inform tailored responses to COVID-19 in other low- and middle-income countries.
洗手和戴口罩等自我保护行为对于减少冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的传播非常有效,但很少有研究关注农村地区的女性,由于她们在经济和社会方面的脆弱性,她们首当其冲地受到了大流行的影响。本研究探讨了是什么促使中国西部农村地区的女性采取自我保护行为来应对 COVID-19。
研究样本由来自中国西部 10 个县 116 个乡镇的 1524 名女性组成。我们于 2020 年 5 月和 8 月收集了有关女性社会经济特征、接触 COVID-19 相关信息、对 COVID-19 的心理反应以及自我保护行为的信息。采用结构方程模型(SEM)分析来分析变量之间的关系。
在封锁期间,研究样本中的 1524 名女性中有 1221 名(80.12%)每次外出时都戴口罩,1021 名(66.99%)每次回家后都用肥皂洗手。感知效能与自我保护行为的关联最强(β=0.38;<0.001)。接受公共卫生指导(β=0.18;<0.001)通过提高感知效能与更多的自我保护行为呈间接相关。较高的社会经济地位也与自我保护行为的采用呈直接相关(β=0.24;<0.001)。其他变量,如接受监测和风险信息、沟通渠道、感知风险和恐惧,与自我保护行为的采用呈间接相关,但其效应大小较小(所有β值均低于 0.10)。
并非所有女性在中国西部的 COVID-19 大流行期间都能采取自我保护行为,如戴口罩和洗手。为了进一步鼓励应对公共卫生危机的行为变化,政府应制定明确和可操作的准则,并采取有针对性的卫生宣传策略,以覆盖社会中最弱势群体。这些发现可能为其他中低收入国家应对 COVID-19 提供参考。