Drivers of protective behaviours during epidemics

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Abstract

Coupling the dynamics of human behaviour and epidemic diffusion is expected to provide significant benefits to the prediction of diseases and their mitigation through pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical interventions. However, quantitative assessment of the most valid drivers of protective behaviours are vastly missing, mostly due to scarce datasets. This limitation translates into approximated models, which often rely on the strong hypotheses about linear and direct dependency of behavioural responses to awareness, opinion dynamics, pandemic progression, or other aspects that can be compared against smaller datasets. Here, we tackle the challenge of integrating multiple datasets and quantify the impact of different drivers of protective behaviours (focusing on mask-wearing) during the COVID-19 pandemic. Multivariate analysis reveals that combinations of beliefs on behavioural efficacy, as well as direct compliance to government interventions, are more predictive than peer-pressure or awareness. Our results provide quantitative evidence about the main drivers of mask wearing behaviours, provide a reproducible method to test their impact on other protective behaviours, and test the main hypothesis underlying popular epidemic-behavioural models, fostering their refinement and interpretability.

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