Preventive Medicine Reports (Jan 2025)

Caregiver worry about COVID-19 as a predictor of social mitigation behaviours and SARS-CoV-2 infection in a 12-city U.S. surveillance study of households with children

  • Steven M. Brunwasser,
  • Tebeb Gebretsadik,
  • Anisha Satish,
  • Jennifer C. Cole,
  • William D. Dupont,
  • Christine Joseph,
  • Casper G. Bendixsen,
  • Agustin Calatroni,
  • Samuel J. Arbes, Jr,
  • Patricia C. Fulkerson,
  • Joshua Sanders,
  • Leonard B. Bacharier,
  • Carlos A. Camargo, Jr,
  • Christine Cole Johnson,
  • Glenn T. Furuta,
  • Rebecca S. Gruchalla,
  • Ruchi S. Gupta,
  • Gurjit K. Khurana Hershey,
  • Daniel J. Jackson,
  • Meyer Kattan,
  • Andrew Liu,
  • George T. O'Connor,
  • Katherine Rivera-Spoljaric,
  • Wanda Phipatanakul,
  • Marc E. Rothenberg,
  • Max A. Seibold,
  • Christine M. Seroogy,
  • Stephen J. Teach,
  • Edward M. Zoratti,
  • Alkis Togias,
  • Tina V. Hartert

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49
p. 102936

Abstract

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Objective: Understanding compliance with COVID-19 mitigation recommendations is critical for informing efforts to contain future infectious disease outbreaks. This study tested the hypothesis that higher levels of worry about COVID-19 illness among household caregivers would predict lower (a) levels of overall and discretionary social exposure activities and (b) rates of household SARS-CoV-2 infections. Methods: Data were drawn from a surveillance study of households with children (N = 1913) recruited from 12 U.S. cities during the initial year of the pandemic and followed for 28 weeks (data collection: 1-May-2020 through 22-Feb-2021). Caregivers rated how much they worried about family members getting COVID-19 and subsequently reported household levels of outside-the-home social activities that could increase risk for SARS-CoV-2 transmission at 14 follow-ups. Caregivers collected household nasal swabs on a fortnightly basis and peripheral blood samples at study conclusion to monitor for SARS-CoV-2 infections by polymerase chain reaction and serology. Primary analyses used generalized linear and generalized mixed-effects modelling. Results: Caregivers with high enrollment levels of worry about COVID-19 illness were more likely to reduce direct social contact outside the household, particularly during the U.S.'s most deadly pandemic wave. Households of caregivers with lower COVID-19 worry had higher odds of (a) reporting discretionary outside-the-home social interaction and (b) SARS-CoV-2 infection. Conclusions: This was, to our knowledge, the first study showing that caregiver COVID-19 illness worry was predictive of both COVID-19 mitigation compliance and laboratory-determined household infection. Findings should inform studies weighing the adaptive value of worrying about infectious disease outbreaks against established detrimental health effects.

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