Medicine (Jun 2022)

Trajectories of perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 over a year

  • Lauren A. Opsasnick, MS,
  • Laura M. Curtis, MS,
  • Mary J. Kwasny, ScD,
  • Rachel O’Conor, PhD,
  • Guisselle A. Wismer, MPH,
  • Julia Yoshino Benavente, MPH,
  • Rebecca M. Lovett, PhD,
  • Morgan R. Eifler, BA,
  • Andrea M. Zuleta, BA,
  • Stacy Cooper Bailey, PhD,
  • Michael S. Wolf, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000029376
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 101, no. 24
p. e29376

Abstract

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Abstract. The U.S. public health response to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been widely criticized as having downplayed the potential implications COVID-19 could have on one's personal health. Despite the unprecedented threat of COVID-19, many individuals still believed that it was not at all likely that they would become infected. We sought to investigate trends in adults’ perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 over the first year of the pandemic, whether distinct trajectories emerged, and if these trajectories differed by participant socio-demographic characteristics. This was a longitudinal cohort study with 5 time points of data collection (March 13, 2020–March 3, 2021). Subjects included 627 adults living with ≥1 chronic conditions, who completed a baseline interview and at least one follow-up interview. In addition to collecting relevant socio-demographic characteristics, participants’ perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 across time was assessed and classified into distinct trajectories. Nearly two-thirds (62.2%) of participants perceived themselves to be highly susceptible to COVID-19 from the onset of the pandemic (“early responders”) and sustained this over a year, a third (29.0%) eventually perceived themselves to be highly susceptible (“late responders”), and 8.8% maintained a low likelihood of susceptibility throughout the pandemic (“non-responders”). In multivariable analyses, compared to White participants, Latinx participants were significantly more likely to be non-responders and report low likelihood of perceived susceptibility (Risk Ratio [RR]: 3.46; 95% confidence interval: 1.19, 10.1), as were Black participants (RR: 5.49; 95% confidence interval: 2.19, 13.8). A year into the COVID-19 pandemic, 1 out of 11 participants persistently did not think they might be susceptible and potentially infected. Future studies are needed to understand reasons why certain individuals, particularly those of racial/ethnic minorities, did not perceive themselves at risk for infection.