Science, Technology, and International Affairs Program, Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA.
Department of Biology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA.
J Community Health. 2022 Oct;47(5):841-848. doi: 10.1007/s10900-022-01109-0. Epub 2022 Jul 5.
The COVID-19 pandemic in the United States has brought to light the problematic way partisan politics interferes with public health prevention and control measures. This study aims to investigate how Americans responded to the novel coronavirus with respect to their sociopolitical identity and masking habits.
This mixed-methods study incorporated three ethnographic projects and surveys together, from two rural areas (in Iowa and California) and one suburban community in California.
We interviewed 156 Americans about how masking habits related to six themes: participants' perceived risk level, concern for themselves and others, support for President Trump, trust in scientific organizations, and confidence in major news outlets. We conducted content analysis of qualitative interviews and evaluated survey questions to understand how and why people masked or engaged in public health prevention practices.
Greater perceived risk, concern for others, and trust in health and media institutions was correlated with increased masking, while support for Trump was predictive of anti-masking sentiments. Participants who diverged from these trends, specifically those who sometimes wore masks, but not always were called "sometimes maskers". These sometimes maskers often identified as politically moderate and were more likely to mask due to concern for a vulnerable person or group in their lives.
Since one in three Americans are political moderates, understanding what promotes their adherence to public health guidelines is essential for policy makers interested in pandemic containment. Relatedly, the conservative tendency to distrust mainstream media is what separated those who reported sometimes masking from those who reported always masking.
美国的 COVID-19 大流行凸显了党派政治以何种有问题的方式干扰公共卫生预防和控制措施。本研究旨在调查美国人在新型冠状病毒方面的反应,以及他们的社会政治身份和戴口罩习惯。
本混合方法研究结合了三个民族志项目和调查,来自两个农村地区(爱荷华州和加利福尼亚州)和加利福尼亚州的一个郊区社区。
我们采访了 156 名美国人,了解他们的口罩习惯与六个主题的关系:参与者感知的风险水平、对自己和他人的关注、对特朗普总统的支持、对科学组织的信任以及对主要新闻媒体的信心。我们对定性访谈进行了内容分析,并评估了调查问题,以了解人们为何戴口罩或参与公共卫生预防实践。
更高的感知风险、对他人的关注以及对健康和媒体机构的信任与增加戴口罩的行为相关,而对特朗普的支持则预示着反口罩情绪。与这些趋势不同的参与者,特别是那些有时戴口罩但不总是戴口罩的人,被称为“有时戴口罩者”。这些有时戴口罩的人通常被认为是政治温和派,他们更有可能因为关心生活中的弱势群体或群体而戴口罩。
由于三分之一的美国人是政治温和派,因此对于有兴趣控制大流行的政策制定者来说,了解是什么促进了他们遵守公共卫生指南至关重要。相关的是,保守派不信任主流媒体的倾向将那些报告有时戴口罩的人与那些报告总是戴口罩的人区分开来。