Department of Political Science and Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, Brown University, United States.
Department of Politics and Center for Public Policy, Drexel University, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2022 Jul;305:115045. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115045. Epub 2022 May 21.
We examine how trust shapes compliance with public health restrictions during the COVID- 19 pandemic in Uganda. We use an endorsement experiment embedded in a mobile phone survey to show that messages from government officials generate more support for public health restrictions than messages from religious authorities, traditional leaders, or international NGOs. We further show that compliance with these restrictions is strongly positively correlated with trust in government, but only weakly correlated with trust in local authorities or other citizens. We use measures of trust from both before and during the pandemic to rule out the possibility that trust is a function of the pandemic itself. The relationship between trust and compliance is especially strong for the Ministry of Health and-more surprisingly-the police. We conclude that trust is crucial for encouraging compliance but note that it may be difficult to sustain, particularly in settings where governments and police forces have reputations for repression.
我们考察了信任如何影响人们在 COVID-19 大流行期间遵守乌干达公共卫生限制措施的情况。我们使用一项手机调查中嵌入的认可实验表明,政府官员发布的信息比宗教当局、传统领袖或国际非政府组织发布的信息更能获得公众对公共卫生限制措施的支持。我们进一步表明,对这些限制措施的遵守与对政府的信任呈高度正相关,但与对地方当局或其他公民的信任仅呈弱相关。我们使用大流行前后的信任措施来排除信任是大流行本身的函数的可能性。信任与合规之间的关系对于卫生部和——更令人惊讶的是——警察部门尤为强烈。我们的结论是,信任对于鼓励遵守是至关重要的,但我们注意到,信任可能难以维持,特别是在政府和警察部队因其镇压行为而声名狼藉的环境中。