Comfort with and willingness to participate in COVID-19 contact tracing: The role of risk perceptions, trust, and political ideology

Contact tracing (CT) can limit the spread of infectious diseases, however its effectiveness hinges on public participation. We evaluated perceptions of the financial and health risk posed by COVID-19 and trust in information about COVID-19 provided by the state health department that manages CT as p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2022-08, Vol.306, p.115174-115174, Article 115174
Hauptverfasser: Van Fossen, Jenna A., Ropp, John W., Darcy, Kathleen, Hamm, Joseph A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Contact tracing (CT) can limit the spread of infectious diseases, however its effectiveness hinges on public participation. We evaluated perceptions of the financial and health risk posed by COVID-19 and trust in information about COVID-19 provided by the state health department that manages CT as predictors of comfort and willingness to comply with CT. We further examined the moderating effect of political ideology on these relationships. We used structural equation modeling to test hypotheses in data from a cross-sectional survey completed by a representative sample of Michigan residents (N = 805) in 2020. Perceptions of the risk of COVID-19 to one's health (but not finances) was negatively related to comfort and willingness to participate in CT. Trust in information about COVID-19 and liberalism were positively related to comfort and willingness. There was also a moderating effect of political ideology, such that conservatives were less comfortable and willing at greater perceptions of health risk. Conservatives and those who perceive a greater health risk may require targeted messaging and more deliberate engagement strategies to increase CT participation. •Trust in information predicted willingness to comply with contact tracing.•COVID-19 health risk perceptions were negatively related to willingness.•Liberals were more willing to comply with contact tracing.•Conservatives were less willing at higher perceptions of health risk.
ISSN:0277-9536
1873-5347
DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115174