Looking back at Covid-19 Government restrictions: Were local lockdown regions with tighter restrictions less adherent before the restrictions and more adherent after?

Chantal den Daas* (Corresponding Author), Marie Johnston, Gill Hubbard, Diane Dixon

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

It is assumed that increases in Covid-19 cases are caused by people not adhering to advised individual transmission-reducing behaviours. Upon the implementation of restrictions, the hypothesis is that those individuals will change their behaviour. We aimed to retrospectively explore adherence to physical distancing before and after restrictions (e.g., lockdowns) were implemented in a region of Scotland. We assessed adherence, intention, and self-efficacy to physical distancing in a series of cross-sectional telephone surveys of a representative sample of adults in Scotland. We included data from before regional restrictions and after restrictions and examined whether regions with and without restrictions differed in adherence. A total of 1724 Scottish adults (675 men, M age = 52.79 years, SD = 17.92) participated (879 (51.0%) pre-restriction, 466 (27.0%) from a restricted region). ANOVA showed that none of the main effects (for region or time) nor the interaction effect were significant. There was a main effect of time on self-efficacy, such that self-efficacy was lower post-restriction measures (M = 4.13, SD = 0.81) compared to pre-restriction time (M = 4.22, SD = 0.79). There was no evidence that adherence was weaker before restrictions were implemented in regions with higher case rates. Nor was there evidence that imposing restrictions increased adherence. In a future pandemic, it is advisable to assess behaviour and beliefs about Covid-19, risk, and behaviours on an ongoing basis and to use that as indicators of the need for intervention even before cases rates start to go up.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)732–737
Number of pages6
JournalTranslational Behavioral Medicine
Volume14
Issue number12
Early online date9 Nov 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Bibliographical note

Open access via the OUP Agreement

Data Availability Statement

No data availability statement.

Funding

The CHARIS study was funded via a grant from the Chief Scientist Office, Edinburgh (COV/ABN/20/07).

FundersFunder number
Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish GovernmentCOV/ABD/20/07

    Keywords

    • Covid-19
    • adherence
    • behaviour change
    • restrictions

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