Knowledge, attitude, practice and fear of COVID-19: A cross-cultural study

Author:

Ali MohammadORCID,Uddin ZakirORCID,Banik Palash ChandraORCID,Hegazy Fatma A.ORCID,Zaman Shamita,Ambia Abu Saleh Mohammed,Siddique Md. Kaoser BinORCID,Islam Rezoana,Khanam Fatema,Bahalul Sayed Mohammad,Sharker Md Ahiduzzaman,Hossain F M Akram,Ahsan Gias UORCID

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundKnowledge, Attitude and Practice (KAP), and Fear toward COVID-19 are an important issue when designing public health approaches to control the spread of this highly contagious disease like COVID-19 during the global pandemic period. Studies with KAP and fear measures are limited only regional or country level, not yet with global or cross-cultural populations. The study is aimed to measure KAP and fear level towards COVID-19 and explore its cross-cultural variances in knowledge by socio-demographic factors among the general population of 8 different countries over 5 continents.MethodA cross-sectional online survey was conducted in April 2020 among 1296 participants using the Google form platform. Considering the social distancing formula and pandemic situation, we collect data using popular social media networks. Univariate and bivariate analyses were used to explore the collected data on KAP, fear, and sociodemographic factors.ResultOverall knowledge score was 9.7 (out of 12) and gender differences (female vs male: 9.8 vs 9.5) were significant (p=0.008) in the bivariate analysis. Knowledge score variances found significant in some regions by gender, marital status and education qualification. The highest and lowest mean knowledge scores were recorded in the Middle East (10.0) and Europe (9.3). Despite having a high fear score (22.5 out of 35), 78.35% of respondents were in a positive attitude and 81.7% in good practice level. Fear score rankings: Middle East (1st; 23.8), Europe (2nd; 23.2); Africa (3rd; 22.7); South Asia (4th; 22.1); Oceania (5th; 21.9); and North America (6th; 21.7). We didn’t find a correlation between fear and knowledge.LimitationDue to the nature of the online survey, aged and rural populations are under-representing (e.g. more than half of the responders are 16-29 age group).ConclusionKAP and fear variation exist among geographical regions. Gender, marital status and education qualification are factors in knowledge variances for some regions. KAP and fear measures can assist health education programs considering some sociodemographic factors and regions during an outbreak of highly contagious disease and, which can uplift a positive attitude and good practice.HighlightsCross-cultural KAP and fear toward COVID-19 are evaluatedRespondents from Europe scored less knowledge on COVID 19 but had more good knowledge levelAbout 80% participants had positive attitude and good practice behavior.Interestingly, Participants in Oceania avoided more crowded places whereas, in Europe worn more masks during outing as a measure of preventionParticipants in Middle East had the highest score in fear, and fear was independent of knowledge

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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