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Do Survey Estimates of the Public’s Compliance with COVID-19 Regulations Suffer from Social Desirability Bias?

Martin Vinæs Larsen, Michael Bang Petersen, Jacob Nyrup

202043 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has led governments to instate a large number of restrictions on and recommendations for citizens’ behavior. One of our best tools for measuring compliance with these strictures are nationally representative surveys that ask citizens to self-report their behavior. But if respondents’ avoid disclosing socially undesirable behaviors, such as not complying with government strictures in a public health crisis, estimates of compliance will be biased upwards. To assess the magnitude of this problem, this study compares measures of compliance from direct questions to those estimated from list-experiments - a response technique that allows respondents to report illicit behaviors without individual-level detection. Implementing the list-experiment in two separate surveys of Danish citizens (n>5,000), we find no evidence that citizens under-report non-compliant behavior. We therefore conclude that survey estimates of compliance with COVID-19 regulations do not suffer from social desirability bias

Topics & Concepts

Compliance (psychology)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Government (linguistics)Social desirability biasPandemicDanishSocial desirability2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSurvey data collectionPublic healthSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Public economicsPsychologyBusinessSocial psychologyEconomicsMedicineStatisticsPathologyPhilosophyDiseaseOutbreakInfectious disease (medical specialty)MathematicsNursingVirologyLinguisticsSurvey Sampling and Estimation TechniquesCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesPsychology of Social Influence