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Citation

Hill, Lauren M.; Davis, Hunter; Drewry, Maura; Shelus, Victoria; Bartels, Sophia M.; Gora Combs, Katherine; Ribisl, Kurt M.; & Lazard, Allison J. (2022). Barriers to and Facilitators of COVID-19 Prevention Behaviors among North Carolina Residents. Health Education & Behavior, 49(2), 231-241. PMCID: PMC9008556

Abstract

COVID-19 was the third leading cause of death in the United States in 2020. Prior to the wide dissemination of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, individual prevention behaviors, such as wearing face masks, have been the primary non-pharmaceutical interventions to reduce infections. We surveyed 404 North Carolina residents recruited through Amazon MTurk in July 2020 to assess adherence to key prevention behaviors (6-foot distancing, mask wearing, and gathering limits) and barriers to and facilitators of adherence. Participants reported past 7-day prevention behaviors and behavioral barriers and facilitators informed by the Integrated Behavior Model and the Health Belief Model (perceived risk, perceived severity, behavioral attitudes, injunctive and descriptive norms, and personal agency). Reported adherence to each behavior in the past 7 days was generally high, with lower adherence to 6-foot distancing and mask wearing in the work context. The most commonly endorsed barriers to 6-foot distancing included physical impediments, forgetting, and unfavorable descriptive norms. For mask wearing, ability to keep a distance, discomfort/inconvenience, and forgetting were most commonly endorsed. In logistic regression models, injunctive social norms followed by perceived personal agency were the strongest independent correlates of 6-foot distancing. Behavioral attitudes and injunctive social norms were independently associated with mask wearing. For gathering size limit adherence, perceived personal agency was the strongest independent predictor followed by perceived severity of COVID-19. Messaging campaigns targeting these barriers and facilitators should be tested. Interventions improving the convenience and salience of physical distancing and mask wearing in high-density public places and places of work may also promote prevention behaviors.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10901981221076408

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Health Education & Behavior

Author(s)

Hill, Lauren M.
Davis, Hunter
Drewry, Maura
Shelus, Victoria
Bartels, Sophia M.
Gora Combs, Katherine
Ribisl, Kurt M.
Lazard, Allison J.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9008556

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

North Carolina

ORCiD

Bartels - 0000-0002-9431-8735
Shelus - 0000-0001-7418-6002