Author: Niepel, Christoph; Kranz, Dirk; Borgonovi, Francesca; Emslander, Valentin; Greiff, Samuel
Title: The coronavirus (COVIDâ€19) fatality risk perception of US adult residents in March and April 2020 Cord-id: 2o8veef0 Document date: 2020_6_10
ID: 2o8veef0
Snippet: The study compares empirical results on the coronavirus SARSâ€CoVâ€2 (causing COVIDâ€19) fatality risk perception of US adult residents stratified for age, gender, and race in midâ€March 2020 (N(1) = 1,182) and midâ€April 2020 (N(2) = 953). While the fatality risk perception has increased from March 2020 to April 2020, our findings suggest that many US adult residents severely underestimated their absolute and relative fatality risk (i.e., differentiated for subgroups defined by preâ€exist
Document: The study compares empirical results on the coronavirus SARSâ€CoVâ€2 (causing COVIDâ€19) fatality risk perception of US adult residents stratified for age, gender, and race in midâ€March 2020 (N(1) = 1,182) and midâ€April 2020 (N(2) = 953). While the fatality risk perception has increased from March 2020 to April 2020, our findings suggest that many US adult residents severely underestimated their absolute and relative fatality risk (i.e., differentiated for subgroups defined by preâ€existing medical conditions and age) at both time points compared to current epidemiological figures. These results are worrying because risk perception, as our study indicates, relates to actual or intended healthâ€protective behaviour that can reduce SARSâ€CoVâ€2 transmission rates.
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