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Emotional responses to COVID-19 stressors increase information avoidance about an important unrelated health threat.

Christopher R GustafsonKathleen R BrooksSyed Imran Ali MeerzaAmalia Yiannaka
Published in: PloS one (2023)
The COVID-19 pandemic, like other crises, has had direct and indirect impacts on individuals, many of which have been negative. While a large body of research has examined the impacts of COVID-19 on people's lives, there is little evidence about how COVID-19 affects decision-making broadly. Emotional responses to COVID-19-related stressors, such as illness and income loss, provide a pathway for these stressors to affect decision-making. In this study, we examine linkages between exposure to COVID-19-related stressors-focusing on temporally specific local case counts and loss of income due to the pandemic-and decisions to access information about antimicrobial resistance (AMR), another critically important health issue. COVID-19 constitutes a natural experiment in that people's exposure to stressors does not result from those individuals' current decisions. Using a nationally representative survey with 1223 respondents in December 2020, we linked the temporally specific COVID-19 cases and income loss experienced by participants to an increased likelihood of feeling hopeless. Higher feelings of hopelessness led to a higher probability of avoiding information about AMR. A mediation analysis confirms that emotional responses to COVID-19 stressors significantly increase information avoidance about an unrelated, but important health issue. Our results suggest that large-scale crises, like COVID-19 and climate change, may diminish action on other important health issues facing humanity.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • health information
  • public health
  • climate change
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • risk assessment
  • depressive symptoms
  • social support
  • cord blood
  • drug induced