Banda Jethro, Dube Albert N, Brumfield Sarah, Crampin Amelia C, Reniers Georges, Amoah Abena S, Helleringer Stéphane
Malawi Epidemiology and Intervention Research Unit, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Department of Community Health, Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, Blantyre, Malawi.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 Oct 24;4(10):e0003474. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003474. eCollection 2024.
We investigated behavioral responses to COVID-19 in Malawi, where a first wave of the pandemic occurred between June and August 2020. Contrary to many countries on the African continent, the Government of Malawi did not impose a lockdown or a stay-at-home order in response to the initial spread of SARS-CoV-2. We hypothesized that, in the absence of such requirements to restrict social interactions, individuals would primarily seek to reduce the risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission during contacts, rather than reduce the extent of their social contacts. We analyzed 4 rounds of a panel survey spanning time periods before, during and after the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Malawi. Five hundred and forty-three participants completed 4 survey interviews between April and November 2020. We found that the likelihood of attending various places and events where individuals work and/or socialize remained largely unchanged during that time. Over the same time frame, however, participants reported adopting on a large scale several behaviors that reduce the transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2 during contacts. The percentage of panel participants who reported practicing physical distancing thus increased from 9.8% to 47.0% in rural areas between April-May 2020 and June-July 2020, and from 11.4% to 59.4% in urban areas. The percentage of respondents who reported wearing a facial mask to prevent the spread of SARS-CoV-2 also increased, reaching 67.7% among rural residents in August-September 2020, and 89.6% among urban residents. The pace at which these behaviors were adopted varied between population groups, with early adopters of mask use more commonly found among more educated office workers, residing in urban areas. The adoption of mask use was also initially slower among women, but later caught up with mask use among men. These findings stress the importance of behavioral changes in containing future SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks in settings where access to vaccination remains low. They also highlight the need for targeted outreach to members of socioeconomic groups in which the adoption of protective behaviors, such as mask use, might be delayed.
我们调查了马拉维对新冠疫情的行为反应,该国在2020年6月至8月间出现了第一波疫情。与非洲大陆的许多国家不同,马拉维政府并未因新冠病毒的初步传播而实施封锁或居家令。我们假设,在没有此类限制社交互动要求的情况下,个人将主要寻求降低接触期间感染新冠病毒的传播风险,而非减少社交接触的范围。我们分析了在马拉维新冠疫情第一波之前、期间和之后的四个时间段内进行的四轮面板调查。543名参与者在2020年4月至11月期间完成了4次调查访谈。我们发现,在此期间,个人前往工作和/或社交场所及活动的可能性基本保持不变。然而,在同一时间段内,参与者报告大规模采取了几种可降低接触期间新冠病毒传播性的行为。在2020年4月至5月与6月至7月期间,农村地区报告采取物理距离措施的面板参与者比例从9.8%增至47.0%,城市地区从11.4%增至59.4%。报告佩戴口罩以防止新冠病毒传播的受访者比例也有所增加,2020年8月至9月期间,农村居民中的这一比例达到67.7%,城市居民中达到89.6%。这些行为的采用速度在不同人群中有所不同,在城市地区受教育程度较高的上班族中,口罩使用的早期采用者更为常见。女性最初采用口罩使用的速度也较慢,但后来赶上了男性。这些发现强调了在疫苗接种率仍然较低的环境中,行为改变对于遏制未来新冠病毒爆发的重要性。它们还凸显了有针对性地向社会经济群体成员进行宣传的必要性,在这些群体中,如佩戴口罩等保护行为的采用可能会延迟。