COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations

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COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations. / Gould, Ashley; Lewis, Lesley; Evans, Lowri et al.
Yn: Behavioral Science, Cyfrol 14, Rhif 1, 63, 17.01.2024.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Gould, A, Lewis, L, Evans, L, Greening, L, Howe-Davies, H, West, J, Roberts, C & Parkinson, JA 2024, 'COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations', Behavioral Science, cyfrol. 14, rhif 1, 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14010063

APA

Gould, A., Lewis, L., Evans, L., Greening, L., Howe-Davies, H., West, J., Roberts, C., & Parkinson, J. A. (2024). COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations. Behavioral Science, 14(1), Erthygl 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14010063

CBE

Gould A, Lewis L, Evans L, Greening L, Howe-Davies H, West J, Roberts C, Parkinson JA. 2024. COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations. Behavioral Science. 14(1):Article 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14010063

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Gould A, Lewis L, Evans L, Greening L, Howe-Davies H, West J et al. COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events: The Value of Behavioral Observations. Behavioral Science. 2024 Ion 17;14(1):63. doi: 10.3390/bs14010063

Author

Gould, Ashley ; Lewis, Lesley ; Evans, Lowri et al. / COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events : The Value of Behavioral Observations. Yn: Behavioral Science. 2024 ; Cyfrol 14, Rhif 1.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - COVID-19 Personal Protective Behaviors during Large Social Events

T2 - The Value of Behavioral Observations

AU - Gould, Ashley

AU - Lewis, Lesley

AU - Evans, Lowri

AU - Greening, Leanne

AU - Howe-Davies, Holly

AU - West, Jonathan

AU - Roberts, Chris

AU - Parkinson, John A

PY - 2024/1/17

Y1 - 2024/1/17

N2 - Within the context of reopening society in the summer of 2021, as the UK moved away from 'lockdowns', the Government of Wales piloted the return of organized 'mass gatherings' of people at a number of test events. The current study reports behavioral observations that were made at two of the test events to inform this process. The researchers were particularly interested in four key factors: how (1) context within a venue, (2) environmental design, (3) staffing and social norms, and (4) time across an event, affected the personal protective behaviors of social distancing and face-covering use. Data collection was undertaken by trained observers. Adherence to protective behaviors was generally high, but there is clear evidence that these behaviors were shaped in a systematic way by the environment, situational cues, and the passage of time during the events. Some instances of large-scale non-adherence to personal protective behaviors were documented. An analysis within a dual-process framework suggests ways to understand and respond to supporting target health behaviors in groups of people where intervention is deemed valuable, such as in complex or ambiguous contexts. This is one of the first studies to include a 'true' behavioral measure in understanding human responses to COVID-19. It demonstrates that behavioral observations can add precision and granularity to understanding human behavior in complex real-world contexts. Given the significant physical and mental health burden created acutely and chronically by COVID-19, this work has implications for how governments and organizations support target populations in other complex challenges facing us today, such as in sustainability, and healthy lifestyle behaviors. An individual's intentions are not always matched by their actions, and so the findings support a balanced liberal paternalistic approach where system-level changes support appropriate individual-level decisions to engender collective responsibility and action.

AB - Within the context of reopening society in the summer of 2021, as the UK moved away from 'lockdowns', the Government of Wales piloted the return of organized 'mass gatherings' of people at a number of test events. The current study reports behavioral observations that were made at two of the test events to inform this process. The researchers were particularly interested in four key factors: how (1) context within a venue, (2) environmental design, (3) staffing and social norms, and (4) time across an event, affected the personal protective behaviors of social distancing and face-covering use. Data collection was undertaken by trained observers. Adherence to protective behaviors was generally high, but there is clear evidence that these behaviors were shaped in a systematic way by the environment, situational cues, and the passage of time during the events. Some instances of large-scale non-adherence to personal protective behaviors were documented. An analysis within a dual-process framework suggests ways to understand and respond to supporting target health behaviors in groups of people where intervention is deemed valuable, such as in complex or ambiguous contexts. This is one of the first studies to include a 'true' behavioral measure in understanding human responses to COVID-19. It demonstrates that behavioral observations can add precision and granularity to understanding human behavior in complex real-world contexts. Given the significant physical and mental health burden created acutely and chronically by COVID-19, this work has implications for how governments and organizations support target populations in other complex challenges facing us today, such as in sustainability, and healthy lifestyle behaviors. An individual's intentions are not always matched by their actions, and so the findings support a balanced liberal paternalistic approach where system-level changes support appropriate individual-level decisions to engender collective responsibility and action.

U2 - 10.3390/bs14010063

DO - 10.3390/bs14010063

M3 - Article

C2 - 38247715

VL - 14

JO - Behavioral Science

JF - Behavioral Science

SN - 2076-328X

IS - 1

M1 - 63

ER -