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2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvonne Schmeisser ◽  
Emma A. Renström ◽  
Hanna Bäck

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020, many governments tried to contain the spread of the virus by legally restricting social life and imposing national lockdowns. The Swedish government did not enforce a national lockdown, but instead appealed to the individual’s self-responsibility to follow specific containment recommendations developed by the Swedish Public Health Agency. Sweden is thus an especially interesting case to study because of the potential influence of psychological and attitudinal individual-level factors that might contribute to compliance with containment recommendations. Drawing on previous literature on how individuals respond during health crises, we define and evaluate a mediation model that considers the role of personality traits and trust authorities to explain compliance. More specifically, we argue that we need to consider the role of trust in authorities to better understand the relationship between personality traits and compliance. In analyses based on a large-scale representative survey (N = 1,034), we find Conscientiousness to be directly linked to compliance, whereas Agreeableness, Neuroticism and Openness were indirectly related to compliance when trust in the Public Health Agency was taken into account.


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina R. Welter ◽  
Yadira Herrera ◽  
Amber L. Uskali ◽  
Steve Seweryn ◽  
Laurie Call ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 112 (S2) ◽  
pp. 186-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Bradley Dexter ◽  
Kelly Kavanagh Salmond ◽  
Leslie Payne ◽  
Marie C. Chia ◽  
Erica Di Ruggiero ◽  
...  

Abstract Setting The Public Health Agency of Canada’s Innovation Strategy (PHAC-IS) was established amid calls for diverse structural funding mechanisms that could support research agendas to inform policy making across multiple levels and jurisdictions. Influenced by a shifting emphasis towards a population health approach and growing interest in social innovation and systems change, the PHAC-IS was created as a national grantmaking program that funded the testing and delivery of promising population health interventions between 2009 and 2020. Intervention During its decade-long tenure, the PHAC-IS supported the development of innovative, locally driven programs that emphasized health equity, encouraged iterative learning to respond reflexively to complex public health problems (the art), while at the same time promoting and integrating population health intervention research (the science) for improved health at the individual, community, and systems levels through four program components. Outcomes PHAC-IS projects reached priority audiences in over 1700 communities. Over 1400 partnerships were established by community-led organizations across multiple sectors with more than $30 million of leveraged funds. By the final phase of funding, 90% of the projects and partnership networks had a sustained impact on policy and public health practice. By the end of the program, 82% of the projects were able to continue their intervention beyond PHAC-IS funding. Through a phased approach, projects were able to adapt, reflect, and build partnership networks to impact policy and practice while increasing reach and scale towards sustainability. Implications Analysis and reflection throughout the course of this initiative showed that strong partnerships that contribute sufficient time to collaboration are critical to achieving meaningful outcomes. Building on evaluation cycles that strengthen project design can ensure both scale and sustainability of project achievements. Furthermore, a flexible, phased approach allows for iterative learning and adjustments across various phases to realize sustained population and systems change. The model and reflexive approach underlying the PHAC-IS has the potential to apply to a broad range of public programs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 112 (S2) ◽  
pp. 204-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Bradley Dexter ◽  
Leslie Payne ◽  
Kelly Kavanagh Salmond ◽  
Sarah Mahato ◽  
Marie C. Chia ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Haixu Xi ◽  
Chengzhi Zhang ◽  
Yi Zhao ◽  
Sheng He

Abstract Since the end of 2019, the ongoing of COVID-19 outbreak worldwide not only challenges the management capacity of governments on the public health emergency, but also tests the management capacity of governments on the public opinion and the governance capacity of dealing with social emergencies. To understand the impact on public emotion over COVID-19 related tweets posted by the major public health agency in the United States, this paper study the process and characteristics of public emotional diffusion in the tweets network by taking the four-official Twitter users of the public health system in the United States as an example. In this paper, we extract the interactions between tweets in the COVID-19-TweetIds dataset, draw the tweets diffusion network, propose a method to measure the characteristics of the emotional diffusion network, analyze the changes of the public emotional intensity and the proportion of emotional polarity, investigate the emotional influence of key nodes and users in the process of tweet emotional diffusion, and study the emotional diffusion of tweets of different tweeting time periods, topics and institutions. The results show that the emotional polarity of tweets has changed from negative to positive with the improvement of pandemic management measures. The public's emotional polarity on pandemic related topics tends to be negative, and the emotional intensity of management measures such as pandemic medical services turn from positive to negative to the greatest extent, while the emotional intensity of pandemic related knowledge changes the most. The tweets posted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration of the United States have a broad impact on public emotions, and the emotional spread of tweets' polarity eventually forms a very close proportion of opposite emotions.


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