Perceived effectiveness, restrictiveness and compliance with containment measures against the Covid-19 pandemic: an international comparative study in 11 countries
Abstract
National governments took action to delay the transmission of the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) by implementing different containment measures. We developed an online survey that included 44 different containment measures. We aimed to assess how effective citizens perceive these measures, which measures are perceived as violation of citizens' personal freedoms, which opinions and demographic factors have an effect on compliance with the measures, and what governments can do to most effectively improve citizens' compliance. The survey was disseminated in 11 countries: UK, Belgium, Netherlands, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, India, Latvia, Poland, Romania, and Sweden. We acquired 9543 unique responses. Our findings show significant differences across countries in perceived effectiveness, restrictiveness, and compliance. Governments that suffer low levels of trust should put more effort into persuading citizens, especially men, in the effectiveness of the proposed measures. They should provide financial compensation to citizens who have lost their job or income due to the containment measures to improve measure compliance. Policymakers should implement the least restrictive and most effective public health measures first during pandemic emergencies instead of implementing a combination of many restrictive measures, which has the opposite effect on citizens' adherence and undermines human rights.
Themen
Sprachen
Englisch
Verlag
Högskolan i Gävle, Kriminologi; Bulgarian University; University of Turku, Finland; Jagiellonian University Medical College Krakow, Poland; Medical College in Progue; Latvian University in Riga, Latvia; Government Medical College, Mysore, India; GE Palade University of Medicine, Romania; Bangor University, UK; Mysore Medical College and Research Institute, Karnataka, India; MDPI
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