自我控制和围绕他人合作的信念预测自己的健康保护行为和对COVID-19政府法规的支持:来自两个欧洲国家的证据

Q2 Psychology Social Psychological Bulletin Pub Date : 2021-03-30 DOI:10.32872/SPB.4391
Charlotte A. Kukowski, K. Bernecker, V. Brandstätter
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在当前的大流行中,要成功缓解疫情,既需要自我调节的健康保护行为,也需要政府实施的监管。因此,研究人员和决策者必须了解个人参与保护健康行为的因素,以及他们对政府法规的支持。结合文献中关于自我控制和合作的知识,我们探索了COVID-19大流行期间个人健康保护行为及其对政府法规支持的潜在预测因素的知情选择。为了在两个欧洲国家进行概念复制,我们在瑞士(N = 352)和英国(N = 212)和封锁前(N = 132)收集了数据,并对变量选择进行了监督机器学习,然后进行了横断面OLS回归,在英国样本中,跨时间进行了回归。结果表明,缓解疫情的个人重要性和对他人合作的信念与健康保护行为和对政府法规的支持有关。此外,自我控制能力高的瑞士参与者更经常采取保护健康的行为。有趣的是,感知风险、年龄和政治倾向在健康保护行为和支持方面始终表现出不显著的弱到零的关联。总之,这些发现突出了自我控制理论在解释covid -19相关结果方面的贡献,并强调了在合作社会背景下将自我控制置于情境化的重要性。
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Self-control and beliefs surrounding others’ cooperation predict own health-protective behaviors and support for COVID-19 government regulations: Evidence from two European countries
In the current pandemic, both self-regulated health-protective behavior and government-imposed regulations are needed for successful outbreak mitigation. Going forward, researchers and decision-makers must therefore understand the factors contributing to individuals’ engagement in health-protective behavior, and their support for government regulations. Integrating knowledge from the literatures on self-control and cooperation, we explore an informed selection of potential predictors of individuals’ health-protective behaviors as well as their support for government regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Aiming for a conceptual replication in two European countries, we collected data in Switzerland (N = 352) and the UK before (N = 212) and during lockdown (n = 132) and conducted supervised machine learning for variable selection, followed by OLS regression, cross-sectionally and, in the UK sample, across time. Results showed that personal importance of outbreak mitigation and beliefs surrounding others’ cooperation are associated with both health-protective behavior and support for government regulations. Further, Swiss participants high in trait self-control engaged in health-protective behavior more often. Interestingly, perceived risk, age, and political orientation consistently displayed nonsignificant weak to zero associations with both health-protective behavior and support. Together, these findings highlight the contribution of self-control theories in explaining COVID-19-relevant outcomes, and underscore the importance of contextualizing self-control within the cooperative social context.
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