School of Political Science and Public Administration, Guangxi Minzu University, Nanning, Guangxi, China.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, 155 College St, 4th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, M5T 3M6, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 24;23(1):751. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15643-6.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, it is vital for individuals to comply with the government's prevention and control measures. This study aims to explore determinants of college students' compliance behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This study conducted an online survey among 3,122 individuals aged 18 and above from March to November 2022 in China. Individuals' compliance behaviour was divided into protective behaviour (that includes wearing a mask, maintaining a physical distance, and getting vaccinated) and restrictive behaviour (that includes offering health codes and a nucleic acid test certificate). Individuals' compliance motivation was divided into calculated motivation (including the fear of being infected, the fear of being published, and previous experience of pandemic prevention) and normative motivation (including the sense of social responsibility and trust in government). We defined young people aged between 18 and 24 with a college degree as young elites, and constructed ordinary least squares linear regression to compare their compliance behaviour with young people without a college degree (young non-elites), and non-young people with a college degree (non-young elites).
Almost three years after the outbreak of the pandemic, Chinese individuals retained a high degree of compliance with COVID-19 prevention and control policies, particularly with respect to the provision of health codes. Young elites were more compliant with getting vaccinated, wearing a mask, providing health codes and testing results than their counterparts. The sense of social responsibility and trust in government were the major drivers of young elites' compliance behaviour during the pandemic. Young elites who were male, had a rural "hukou", and were not a member of the China Communist Party were more compliant with COVID-19 prevention and control measures.
This study found that young elites in China had high policy compliance during the COVID-19 pandemic. These young elites' compliance behaviour was driven by their sense of social responsibility and trust in government rather than the fear of being infected and the fear of being punished as a result of violating the regulations. We suggest that in the context of managing health crises, in stead of introducing punitive measures to enforce citizens to comply with the management measures, promoting citizens' sense of social responsibility and building a trusting relationship with citizens contrite to the enhancement of citizens' policy compliance.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,个人遵守政府的预防和控制措施至关重要。本研究旨在探讨大学生在 COVID-19 大流行期间遵守行为的决定因素。
本研究于 2022 年 3 月至 11 月在中国对 3122 名年龄在 18 岁及以上的个人进行了在线调查。个人的遵守行为分为保护行为(包括戴口罩、保持身体距离和接种疫苗)和限制行为(包括提供健康码和核酸检测证书)。个人的遵守动机分为计算动机(包括对感染的恐惧、对公布的恐惧和以前的防疫经验)和规范动机(包括社会责任感和对政府的信任)。我们将年龄在 18 至 24 岁且拥有大学学历的年轻人定义为年轻精英,并构建普通最小二乘法线性回归模型,将他们的遵守行为与没有大学学历的年轻人(年轻非精英)和有大学学历的非年轻人(非年轻精英)进行比较。
大流行爆发近三年后,中国个人对 COVID-19 防控政策的遵守度仍然很高,特别是在提供健康码方面。年轻精英在接种疫苗、戴口罩、提供健康码和检测结果方面比同龄人更遵守规定。社会责任感和对政府的信任是年轻精英在大流行期间遵守行为的主要驱动因素。男性、农村“户口”、非中国共产党党员的年轻精英更遵守 COVID-19 防控措施。
本研究发现,中国的年轻精英在 COVID-19 大流行期间具有较高的政策遵守度。这些年轻精英的遵守行为是由他们的社会责任感和对政府的信任驱动的,而不是由于对感染的恐惧和违反规定而受到惩罚的恐惧。我们建议,在管理卫生危机的背景下,与其引入惩罚性措施来强制公民遵守管理措施,不如促进公民的社会责任感,并与公民建立信任关系,以增强公民对政策的遵守度。