National, Center for Emerging & Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA.
Center for Global Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Jun;11(3):1628-1642. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01638-x. Epub 2023 May 31.
While previous studies have identified a range of factors associated with mask wearing in the US, little is known about drivers of mask-wearing among racial and ethnic minority groups. This analysis assessed whether factors positively associated with wearing a mask early in the pandemic differed between participants grouped by race/ethnicity (Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic Asian, and non-Hispanic White).
Data were obtained from a US internet panel survey of 3217 respondents during May-November 2020 (weighted by race/ethnicity, age, gender, and education to the US national population). Within each of the four available racial/ethnic groups, crude and adjusted odds ratios (COR and AOR) were calculated using logistic regression to assess factors positively associated with wearing a mask. Adjusted models were controlled for age, gender, education, county COVID-19 case count, presence of a state-issued mask mandate, and interview month.
The following variables were most strongly positively associated with mask wearing (p<0.05) in each racial/ethnic group: Hispanic-seeing others wearing masks (AOR: 6.7), importance of wearing a mask combined with social distancing (AOR: 3.0); non-Hispanic Black-belief that wearing a mask would protect others from coronavirus (AOR: 5.1), reporting hearing that one should wear a mask (AOR: 3.6); non-Hispanic Asian-belief that people important to them believe they should wear a mask (COR: 5.1, not statistically significant); and non-Hispanic White-seeing others wearing masks (AOR: 3.1), importance of wearing a mask (AOR: 2.3).
Public health efforts to encourage mask wearing should consider the diversity of behavioral influences within different population groups.
尽管之前的研究已经确定了与美国口罩佩戴相关的一系列因素,但对于少数族裔群体戴口罩的驱动因素知之甚少。本分析评估了在大流行早期与佩戴口罩相关的积极因素是否因种族/族裔(西班牙裔、非西班牙裔黑人、非西班牙裔亚裔和非西班牙裔白人)分组的参与者而有所不同。
数据来自于 2020 年 5 月至 11 月期间在美国互联网小组调查中获得的 3217 名受访者(按种族/族裔、年龄、性别和教育程度加权,以匹配美国全国人口)。在四个可用的种族/族裔群体中,使用逻辑回归计算了每个群体中与佩戴口罩相关的粗比值比(COR)和调整比值比(AOR),以评估与佩戴口罩相关的积极因素。调整模型控制了年龄、性别、教育程度、县 COVID-19 病例数、州发布的口罩强制令的存在以及访谈月份。
在每个种族/族裔群体中,与佩戴口罩最显著相关的变量(p<0.05)如下:西班牙裔-看到其他人戴口罩(AOR:6.7)、戴口罩与保持社交距离同样重要(AOR:3.0);非西班牙裔黑人-相信戴口罩可以保护他人免受冠状病毒感染(AOR:5.1)、听说应该戴口罩(AOR:3.6);非西班牙裔亚裔-认为对自己重要的人认为自己应该戴口罩(COR:5.1,无统计学意义);以及非西班牙裔白人-看到其他人戴口罩(AOR:3.1)、戴口罩的重要性(AOR:2.3)。
鼓励戴口罩的公共卫生工作应考虑不同人群群体中行为影响的多样性。