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Habits and Reflective Processes in COVID-19 Transmission-reducing Behaviors: Examining Theoretical Predictions in a Representative Sample of the Population of Scotland

den Daas, Chantal; Dixon, Diane; Hubbard, Gill; Allan, Julia; Johnston, Marie

Authors

Chantal den Daas

Diane Dixon

Gill Hubbard

Julia Allan

Marie Johnston



Abstract

Background
Based on theory, COVID-19 transmission-reducing behaviors (TRBs) should become habitual because of their frequent performance. Habits have been hypothesized to develop through reflective processes and, to act in conjunction with them.

Purpose
We investigated the existence, development, and consequences of TRB habits, for physical distancing, handwashing, and wearing face coverings.

Methods
A representative sample of the Scottish population (N = 1,003) was interviewed by a commercial polling company in August–October 2020 and half were re-interviewed later. Measures included adherence, habit, personal routine tendency, reflective processes, and action control for three TRBs. Data were analyzed using general linear modeling, regression, and mediation analyses.

Results
Handwashing was most habitual; only face covering became more habitual over time. Routine tendencies predicted TRB habits, and adherence to handwashing and physical distancing. Those reporting greater habits reported better adherence, for physical distancing and handwashing, and this remained true after controlling for previous adherence. Reflective and habit processes independently predicted adherence for physical distancing and handwashing; only reflective processes were independently predictive for face covering. The relationship between planning and forgetting and adherence was partly direct, and partly mediated by habit.

Conclusions
The results confirm hypotheses from habit theory including the role of repetition and of personal routine tendency in developing habits. They are consistent with dual processing theory in finding that both reflective and habit processes predict adherence to TRBs. Action planning partly mediated the relation between reflective processes and adherence. The COVID-19 pandemic has enabled the testing and confirmation of several theoretical hypotheses about habit processes in the enactment of TRBs.

Citation

den Daas, C., Dixon, D., Hubbard, G., Allan, J., & Johnston, M. (2023). Habits and Reflective Processes in COVID-19 Transmission-reducing Behaviors: Examining Theoretical Predictions in a Representative Sample of the Population of Scotland. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 57(11), 910–920. https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaad025

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jun 15, 2023
Publication Date 2023-11
Deposit Date Jun 19, 2023
Publicly Available Date Jun 19, 2023
Journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine
Print ISSN 0883-6612
Electronic ISSN 1532-4796
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 57
Issue 11
Pages 910–920
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaad025
Keywords COVID-19, Transmission-reducing behaviors, Habit, Personal routine tendency, Reflective processes, Adherence
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/3127854

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