Using machine learning to unveil relevant predictors of adherence to recommended health-protective behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark.

Journal: Applied psychology. Health and well-being
PMID:

Abstract

What were relevant predictors of individuals' proclivity to adhere to recommended health-protective behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark? Applying machine learning (namely, lasso regression) to a repeated cross-sectional survey spanning 10 months comprising 25 variables (Study 1; N = 15,062), we found empathy toward those most vulnerable to COVID-19, knowledge about how to protect oneself from getting infected, and perceived moral costs of nonadherence to be strong predictors of individuals' self-reported adherence to recommended health-protective behaviors. We further explored the relations between these three factors and individuals' self-reported proclivity for adherence to recommended health-protective behaviors as they unfold between and within individuals over time in a second study, a Danish panel study comprising eight measurement occasions spanning eight months (N = 441). Results of this study suggest that the relations largely occurred at the trait-like interindividual level, as opposed to at the state-like intraindividual level. Together, the findings provide insights into what were relevant predictors for individuals' overall level of adherence to recommended health-protective behaviors (in Denmark) as well as how these predictors might (not) be leveraged to promote public adherence in future epidemics or pandemics.

Authors

  • Lau Lilleholt
    Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • Gretchen B Chapman
    Department of Social and Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
  • Robert Böhm
    Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Universitätsstrasse 7, 1010, Vienna, Austria. robert.boehm@univie.ac.at.
  • Ingo Zettler
    Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.