Abstract

The world has suffered from the COVID-19 pandemic. While it is expected that societies will learn lessons from this experience, knowledge about how people responded to the pandemic in its early stages is very limited. With the aim of urgently providing policymakers with scientific evidence about how to better inform the public about fighting against COVID-19, this study made an initial attempt to assess how people responded to the COVID-19 outbreak during its early stages. Based on a life-oriented approach, this study collected data on a large set of behaviors and attitudes through a nationwide retrospective panel survey conducted in Japan at the end of March 2020, when the country had 1953 confirmed infection cases in total. Valid data were collected from 1052 residents from the whole of Japan, taking into account a balanced population distribution in terms of age, gender, and region. Respondents were asked to report changes in their daily activity-travel behavior, long-distance trips, and other life activities caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and associated factors (information reliability, risk perception, attitudes about policy-making and communications with the public, etc.). Results of both aggregate and modeling analyses (using a structural equation model and a data mining approach) indicate that poor communication with the public may have been closely related to the spread of COVID-19 in Japan, and that effective interventions should be made by focusing on interactions between target persons and close members of their social networks. It is also revealed that differentiated communications are necessary to encourage different types of behavioral changes. Risk communication should be better designed to encourage people to voluntarily modify their needs in life [L] and perform the needed activities [A] at places with sufficient spaces [S] and proper duration of time and at the proper timing [TING]. Such a LASTING approach may be crucial to enhance the effects of massive public involvement in mitigating the spread of COVID-19. The findings from this study are not only useful to tackle the current pandemic, but also have a long-term value for addressing future pandemics.

Highlights

  • The world is facing multiple challenges due to the COVID19 pandemic, such as lockdowns, restrictions on trip making, and the closure of schools and businesses

  • Looking at what’s going on across the world, it seems that society has not yet learned the lessons from history and from what happened during the current pandemic

  • Based on a nation-wide questionnaire survey, this study has revealed the various changes in life in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan, as well as the potential factors behind the observed changes

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Summary

Introduction

The world is facing multiple challenges due to the COVID19 pandemic, such as lockdowns, restrictions on trip making, and the closure of schools and businesses. The WHO declared that COVID-19 was a pandemic on March 11, 2020, when more than 125,000 cases and nearly 5000 deaths across the world were identified. The number of infections worldwide has increased continuously. As of January 7, 2021, the total number of cases worldwide stood at 87,343,860, with total deaths reaching 1,886,348 (https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/ map.html). The United States has suffered most, with 361,312 deaths, followed by Brazil (198,974 deaths), India (150,336 deaths), and Mexico (129,987 deaths). Such a threat to public health is not the first in human history. Looking at what’s going on across the world, it seems that society has not yet learned the lessons from history and from what happened during the current pandemic

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