LIVIVO - The Search Portal for Life Sciences

zur deutschen Oberfläche wechseln
Advanced search

Search results

Result 1 - 1 of total 1

Search options

Article ; Online: How fear and collectivism influence publics preventive intention towards COVID-19 infection

Feng Huang / Huimin Ding / Zeyu Liu / Peijing Wu / Meng Zhu / Ang Li / Tingshao Zhu

BMC Public Health, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-

a study based on big data from the social media

2020  Volume 9

Abstract: ... of fear and collectivism on the publics preventive intention towards COVID-19 through the analysis ... were used to test the interaction of fear and collectivism on preventive intention. Results The study ... reveals that: (a) both fear and collectivism can positively predict people’s preventive intention and (b ...

Abstract Abstract Background Despite worldwide calls for precautionary measures to combat COVID-19, the public’s preventive intention still varies significantly among different regions. Exploring the influencing factors of the publics preventive intention is very important to curtail the spread of COVID-19. Previous studies have found that fear can effectively improve the publics preventive intention, but they ignore the impact of differences in cultural values. The present study examines the combined effect of fear and collectivism on the publics preventive intention towards COVID-19 through the analysis of social media big data. Methods The Sina microblog posts of 108,914 active users from Chinese mainland 31 provinces were downloaded. The data was retrieved from January 11 to February 21, 2020. Afterwards, we conducted a province-level analysis of the contents of downloaded posts. Three lexicons were applied to automatically recognise the scores of fear, collectivism, and preventive intention of 31 provinces. After that, a multiple regression model was established to examine the combined effect of fear and collectivism on the publics preventive intention towards COVID-19. The simple slope test and the Johnson-Neyman technique were used to test the interaction of fear and collectivism on preventive intention. Results The study reveals that: (a) both fear and collectivism can positively predict people’s preventive intention and (b) there is an interaction of fear and collectivism on people’s preventive intention, where fear and collectivism reduce each other’s positive influence on people’s preventive intention. Conclusion The promotion of fear on people’s preventive intention may be limited and conditional, and values of collectivism can well compensate for the promotion of fear on preventive intention. These results provide scientific inspiration on how to enhance the publics preventive intention towards COVID-19 effectively.
Keywords COVID-19 ; Prevention and control ; Fear ; Cultural characteristics ; Social media ; Big data analysis ; Public aspects of medicine ; RA1-1270
Subject code 150
Language English
Publishing date 2020-11-01T00:00:00Z
Publisher BMC
Document type Article ; Online
Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

More links

Kategorien

To top