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Compliance with COVID-19 Mitigation Measures in the United States

Benjamin van Rooij, Anne Leonore de Bruijn, Chris Reinders Folmer, Emmeke Barbara Kooistra, Malouke Esra Kuiper, Megan Brownlee, Elke Olthuis, Adam Fine

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Abstract

The COVID-19 mitigation measures require a fundamental shift in human behavior. The present study assesses what factors influence Americans to comply with the stay at home and social distancing measures. It analyzes data from an online survey, conducted on April 3, 2020, of 570 participants from 35 states that have adopted such measures. The results show that while perceptual deterrence was not associated with compliance, people actually comply less when they fear the authorities. Further, two broad processes promote compliance. First, compliance depended on people’s capacity to obey the rules, opportunity to break the rules, and self-control. As such, compliance results from their own personal abilities and the context in which they live. Second, compliance depended on people’s intrinsic motivations, including substantive moral support and social norms. This paper discusses the implications of these findings for ensuring compliance to effectively mitigate the virus.

Topics & Concepts

Compliance (psychology)Social distanceDeterrence theoryContext (archaeology)PerceptionSanctionsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)EnforcementBusinessControl (management)DistancingPsychologySocial psychologyPublic relationsPolitical scienceEconomicsMedicineLawPaleontologyManagementPathologyBiologyNeuroscienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseasePsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentCrime Patterns and InterventionsCriminal Justice and Corrections Analysis