Do knowledge and attitudes matter for preventive behavioral practices toward the COVID-19? A cross-sectional online survey among the adult population in Bangladesh

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Do knowledge and attitudes matter for preventive behavioral practices toward the COVID-19? A cross-sectional online survey among the adult population in Bangladesh

08, December 2020 | Bangladesh

Authors:

Hossain M.B. Alam M.Z. Islam M.S. Sultan S. Faysal M.M. Rima S. Hossain M.A. Mahmood M.M. Kashfi S.S. Mamun A.A. Monia H.T. Shoma S.S.

Abstract


The Government of Bangladesh has adopted several non-therapeutic measures to tackle the pandemic of SARS- CoV-2. However, the curve of COVID-19 positive cases has not significantly flattened yet, as the adoption of preventive measures by the general population is predominantly a behavioral phenomenon that is often influ- enced by people's knowledge and attitudes. This study aimed to assess the levels of knowledge, attitudes, and preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19 and their interrelationships among the population of Bangladesh aged 18 years and above. This study adopted a web-based cross-sectional survey design and collected data from 1056 respondents using the online platform Google Form. We employed the independent sample t-test, one-way ANOVA, Pearson's product-moment correlation, and Spearman rank-order correlation to produce the bivariate level statistics. We also run multiple linear and logistic regression models to identify the factors affecting knowledge, attitudes, and preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19. The respondents had an average knowledge score of 17.29 (Standard Deviation (SD) 1⁄4 3.30). The average score for attitude scale toward COVID- 19 was 13.6 (SD 1⁄4 3.7). The respondents had excellent preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19 (mean 7.7, SD 1⁄4 0.72). However, this study found that knowledge and attitudes did not matter for preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19. Instead, education appeared as a sole predictor for preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19; that means preventive behavioral practices toward COVID-19 was lower among the less educated respondents. This study suggests increasing education as a long-term strategy and taking immediate action to increase knowledge and decrease negative attitudes toward COVID-19 through targeted health educa- tion initiatives as a short-term strategy.