Chen Yi-Lang, Rahman Andi
Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Ming Chi University of Technology, New Taipei 24301, Taiwan.
Department of Industrial Engineering, Andalas University, Padang 25175, Indonesia.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Jun 11;11(12):1711. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11121711.
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected not only public health but also people's daily lives. Among various strategies to prevent infection, mask wearing and vaccination are considered to be the most effective methods; however, they may affect the comfortable interpersonal distance (IPD) for social interactions. In 2023, although the COVID-19 epidemic is considered to be similar to influenza, the public health sector of Taiwan still plans to give each person at least one dose per year, and even two does for special cases such as the elderly; and more than 90% of Taiwanese are still accustomed to wearing masks in public areas. Compared with mask wearing, studies examining the effects of vaccination on IPD are lacking. Therefore, an online survey was conducted in this study to collect the IPD data of 50 male and 50 female participants to elucidate the effects of mask wearing, vaccination, and target sex variables on IPD. The results showed that all variables significantly affected IPD (all < 0.001). The effect of masks on IPD (49.1 cm) was slightly greater than that of vaccination (43.5 cm). The IPDs reported for wearing and not wearing masks were 145.7 and 194.8 cm, respectively, and those for vaccinated and unvaccinated were 148.5 and 192.0 cm, respectively. Regardless of participant sex, the IPDs for the female targets were significantly shorter than those for the male targets, which was consistent with the results of previous studies. Although mask wearing and vaccination are functionally different in nature, the findings indicate that the effects of both on IPD are nearly identical, jointly shortening IPD to approximately 93 cm. This implies that not only masks but also vaccination could lead to the shortening of IPD and may cause challenges in the prevention and control of COVID-19 transmission.
新冠疫情不仅影响了公众健康,还对人们的日常生活产生了影响。在各种预防感染的策略中,佩戴口罩和接种疫苗被认为是最有效的方法;然而,它们可能会影响社交互动中舒适的人际距离(IPD)。2023年,尽管新冠疫情被认为与流感相似,但台湾公共卫生部门仍计划每年为每人至少接种一剂疫苗,对于老年人等特殊情况甚至接种两剂;并且超过90%的台湾人仍习惯在公共场所佩戴口罩。与佩戴口罩相比,研究接种疫苗对人际距离影响的研究较少。因此,本研究进行了一项在线调查,收集了50名男性和50名女性参与者的人际距离数据,以阐明佩戴口罩、接种疫苗和目标性别变量对人际距离的影响。结果表明,所有变量均对人际距离有显著影响(均P<0.001)。口罩对人际距离的影响(49.1厘米)略大于接种疫苗(43.5厘米)。报告的佩戴口罩和未佩戴口罩时的人际距离分别为145.7厘米和194.8厘米,接种疫苗和未接种疫苗时的人际距离分别为148.5厘米和192.0厘米。无论参与者性别如何,女性目标的人际距离均显著短于男性目标,这与先前研究的结果一致。尽管佩戴口罩和接种疫苗在功能上本质不同,但研究结果表明两者对人际距离的影响几乎相同,共同将人际距离缩短至约93厘米。这意味着不仅口罩,接种疫苗也可能导致人际距离缩短,并可能给新冠病毒传播的防控带来挑战。