Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
The Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Psychol Med. 2023 Sep;53(12):5709-5716. doi: 10.1017/S0033291722002938. Epub 2022 Sep 26.
Little is known about how conspiracy beliefs and health responses are interrelated over time during the course of the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic. This longitudinal study tested two contrasting, but not mutually exclusive, hypotheses through cross-lagged modeling. First, based on the consequential nature of conspiracy beliefs, we hypothesize that conspiracy beliefs predict an increase in detrimental health responses over time. Second, as people may rationalize their behavior through conspiracy beliefs, we hypothesize that detrimental health responses predict increased conspiracy beliefs over time.
We measured conspiracy beliefs and several health-related responses (i.e. physical distancing, support for lockdown policy, and the perception of the coronavirus as dangerous) at three phases of the pandemic in the Netherlands ( = 4913): During the first lockdown (Wave 1: April 2020), after the first lockdown (Wave 2: June 2020), and during the second lockdown (Wave 3: December 2020).
For physical distancing and perceived danger, the overall cross-lagged effects supported both hypotheses, although the standardized effects were larger for the effects of conspiracy beliefs on these health responses than vice versa. The within-person change results only supported an effect of conspiracy beliefs on these health responses, depending on the phase of the pandemic. Furthermore, an overall cross-lagged effect of conspiracy beliefs on reduced support for lockdown policy emerged from Wave 2 to 3.
The results provide stronger support for the hypothesis that conspiracy beliefs predict health responses over time than for the hypothesis that health responses predict conspiracy beliefs over time.
在 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间,关于阴谋论信仰和健康反应如何随时间相互关联的信息知之甚少。本纵向研究通过交叉滞后建模检验了两个相互矛盾但不相互排斥的假设。首先,基于阴谋论信仰的后果性质,我们假设阴谋论信仰会预测随着时间的推移,有害的健康反应会增加。其次,由于人们可能通过阴谋论信仰来为自己的行为辩护,我们假设随着时间的推移,有害的健康反应会预测增加阴谋论信仰。
我们在荷兰 COVID-19 大流行的三个阶段(n = 4913)测量了阴谋论信仰和几个与健康相关的反应(即身体距离、对封锁政策的支持以及对冠状病毒的危险感知):第一次封锁期间(第 1 波:2020 年 4 月)、第一次封锁后(第 2 波:2020 年 6 月)和第二次封锁期间(第 3 波:2020 年 12 月)。
对于身体距离和感知危险,总体交叉滞后效应支持了这两个假设,尽管阴谋论信仰对这些健康反应的标准化效应大于相反的情况。个体内变化结果仅支持了阴谋论信仰对这些健康反应的影响,这取决于大流行的阶段。此外,从第 2 波到第 3 波,阴谋论信仰对减少对封锁政策的支持出现了总体交叉滞后效应。
结果为阴谋论信仰随时间预测健康反应的假设提供了更强的支持,而不是健康反应随时间预测阴谋论信仰的假设。