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About:
Knowledge and Behaviors of Adults with Underlying Health Conditions During the Onset of the COVID-19 U.S. Outbreak: The Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities Survey
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schema:ScholarlyArticle
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wasabi.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
title
Knowledge and Behaviors of Adults with Underlying Health Conditions During the Onset of the COVID-19 U.S. Outbreak: The Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities Survey
Creator
Bailey, C
Wolf, Michael
Arvanitis, Marina
Curtis, Laura
Lindquist, ·
Marino, Diana
Morgan Eifler, ·
O'conor, Rachel
Opsasnick, Lauren
Persell, Stephen
Russell, Andrea
Stacy, ·
Wismer, Guisselle
Yoshino Benavente, Julia
source
Medline; PMC
abstract
Accurate understanding of COVID-19 safety recommendations early in the outbreak was complicated by inconsistencies in public health and media messages. We sought to characterize high-risk adults’ knowledge of COVID-19 symptoms, prevention strategies, and prevention behaviors. We used data from the Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities (C3) survey collected between March 13 thru March 20, 2020. A total of 673 predominately older adults with ≥ 1 chronic condition completed the telephone interview. Knowledge was assessed by asking participants to name three symptoms of COVID-19 and three actions to prevent infection. Participants were then asked if and how they had changed plans due to coronavirus. Most participants could identify three symptoms (71.0%) and three preventive actions (69.2%). Commonly reported symptoms included: fever (78.5%), cough (70.6%), and shortness of breath (45.2%); preventive actions included: washing hands (86.5%) and social distancing (86.2%). More than a third of participants reported social distancing themselves (38.3%), and 28.8% reported obtaining prescription medication to prepare for the outbreak. In multivariable analyses, no participant characteristics were associated with COVID-19 knowledge. Women were more likely than men, and Black adults were less likely than White adults to report practicing social distancing. Individuals with low health literacy were less likely to report obtaining medication supplies. In conclusion, though most higher-risk individuals were aware of social distancing as a prevention strategy early in the outbreak, less than half reported enacting it, and racial disparities were apparent. Consistent messaging and the provision of tangible resources may improve future adherence to safety recommendations.
has issue date
2020-08-11
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1007/s10900-020-00906-9
bibo:pmid
32780294
has license
no-cc
sha1sum (hex)
f185882b8120f4afdbea3679755ef7d4707cbf12
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10900-020-00906-9
resource representing a document's title
Knowledge and Behaviors of Adults with Underlying Health Conditions During the Onset of the COVID-19 U.S. Outbreak: The Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities Survey
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC7418091
has PubMed identifier
32780294
schema:publication
J Community Health
resource representing a document's body
covid:f185882b8120f4afdbea3679755ef7d4707cbf12#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'participants'
named entity 'apparent'
named entity 'messages'
named entity 'actions'
named entity 'actions'
named entity 'Journal'
named entity 'SHORTNESS OF BREATH'
named entity 'CHICAGO'
named entity 'DUE TO'
named entity 'IDENTIFY'
named entity 'USED'
named entity 'SUPPLIES'
named entity '20%'
named entity 'PREVENTION STRATEGY'
named entity 'PRESCRIPTION'
named entity 'CHANGED'
named entity 'ASSOCIATED WITH'
named entity 'RISK'
named entity 'LESS THAN'
named entity 'FEVER'
named entity 'UNDERSTANDING'
covid:arg/f185882b8120f4afdbea3679755ef7d4707cbf12
named entity 'symptoms'
named entity 'adults'
named entity 'participants'
named entity 'health literacy'
named entity 'men'
named entity 'prevention'
named entity 'plans'
named entity 'Knowledge'
named entity 'Women'
named entity 'multivariable'
named entity 'aware'
named entity 'identify'
named entity 'future'
named entity 'breath'
named entity 'Chicago'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'changed'
named entity 'Community Health'
named entity 'social distancing'
named entity 'low health literacy'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'coronavirus'
named entity 'White adults'
named entity 'Chicago'
named entity 'fever'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'health literacy'
named entity 'public health'
named entity 'infection'
named entity 'nutrition'
named entity 'prescription medications'
named entity 'social distancing'
named entity 'social distance'
named entity 'infection'
named entity 'Illinois'
named entity 'federally qualified health center'
named entity 'social distancing'
named entity 'cough'
named entity 'Illinois governor'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'dehydration'
named entity 'Latino'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'infection'
named entity 'prescription medicines'
named entity 'cohort study'
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