School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
School of Allied Health, Faculty of Education and Health Sciences, Ageing Research Centre, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Sep 26;23(1):1864. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16757-7.
Public health measures are the main intervention to stop the spread of COVID-19. They rely on the adherence to everyday health behaviors, and depend on those at high and low personal risk of serious disease to comply. Young people are crucial to stemming community transmission, and are often living in shared housing and at a stage of their lives with more economic uncertainty than older groups. Public health messaging has relied on the mantra that we are 'in it together,' despite very diverse experiences of the pandemic across different groups. The central aim of this research is to understand and optimize young peoples' engagement with public health guidelines with the view to improve future adherence with public health initiatives.
Twelve young people were interviewed as part of this research, ranging from 18 to 24 years. Interviewees were chosen to ensure that there was a diverse range of opinions within the participant pool. Interviews were semi-structured with open questions and the flexibility to explore the topics of interest that arose. All interviews were fully transcribed and analyzed using thematic analysis.
This study found that participants deemed the consequences of lockdown a greater threat than infection with SARS-COV-2. Participants expressed concerns about the government's handling of the pandemic. Some felt young peoples' interests were not represented by authorities. There were concerns that messaging was inaccurate, difficult to understand, and filled with statistical and medical jargon. These perceptions underpinned a sense that the guidelines could be broken in good conscience as well as result in accidental breaches of the guidelines. Though wider community factors were often cited as having a positive influence on health behavior, differences and division were seen to inspire trust or adherence.
These findings provide an insight into the psychological, financial and physical difficulties young people face as a consequence of pandemic public health measures and lockdowns in particular. They highlight the need for better communication with young people to support and embed trust in authorities and the scientific and political community.
公共卫生措施是阻止 COVID-19 传播的主要干预手段。它们依赖于对日常健康行为的遵守,并且依赖于那些患有严重疾病高风险和低风险的人来遵守。年轻人对于阻止社区传播至关重要,而且他们通常生活在合住的房屋中,并且比老年群体面临更多的经济不确定性。公共卫生信息传达一直依赖于“我们在一起”的口号,尽管不同群体在大流行期间的经历大不相同。这项研究的主要目的是了解和优化年轻人对公共卫生指南的参与度,以期提高他们未来对公共卫生倡议的遵守度。
作为这项研究的一部分,对 12 名年龄在 18 至 24 岁之间的年轻人进行了采访。选择受访者时,确保参与者群体中存在不同的观点。访谈采用半结构化方式,提出开放式问题,并灵活地探讨出现的感兴趣的主题。所有访谈均进行了完整的转录,并使用主题分析进行了分析。
这项研究发现,参与者认为封锁的后果比感染 SARS-COV-2 更为严重。参与者对政府处理大流行的方式表示担忧。一些人认为年轻人的利益没有得到当局的代表。他们担心信息传递不准确,难以理解,并且充斥着统计和医学术语。这些看法使人们认为,在良心上可以违反这些准则,并且可能会意外违反这些准则。尽管社区的其他因素通常被认为对健康行为有积极影响,但差异和分裂被视为激发信任或遵守的因素。
这些发现深入了解了年轻人由于大流行公共卫生措施,尤其是封锁措施而面临的心理、财务和身体困难。它们强调了与年轻人更好地沟通的必要性,以支持并建立对当局以及科学和政治界的信任。