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COVID-19 Information and Self-protective Behaviors Among Rural Communities in Tropical Forests

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Public Health
Date 2022 Jul 20
PMID 35858862
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Health risk communication plays a key role in promoting self-protective measures, which are critical in suppressing COVID-19 contagion. Relatively little is known about the communication channels used by rural poor populations to learn novel measures and their effectiveness in promoting self-protective behaviors. Behavioral change can be shaped by people's trust in government institutions which may be differentiated by social identity, including indigeneity.

Methods: During an early phase of the pandemic, we conducted two telephone surveys with over 460 communities - both Indigenous and mestizo - without road access and limited communication access in the Peruvian Amazon. This is the first report on the association of information sources about self-protective measures against COVID-19 with the adoption of self-protective behaviors in remote rural areas in developing countries.

Results: People mainly relied on mass media (radio, television, newspapers) and interpersonal sources (local authorities, health workers, neighbors/relatives) for information and adopted handwashing, mask-wearing, social distancing, and social restrictions to varying degrees. Overall, self-protective behaviors were largely positively and negatively associated with mass media and interpersonal sources, respectively, depending on the source-measure combination. Mistrust of the government seems to have shaped how Indigenous and mestizo peoples distinctively responded to interpersonal information sources and relied on mass media.

Conclusions: Our findings call for improved media access to better manage pandemics in rural areas, especially among remote Indigenous communities.

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Zhang X, Du L, Huang Y, Luo X, Wang F BMC Public Health. 2024; 24(1):316.

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COVID-19 contagion across remote communities in tropical forests.

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