Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The disease was first detected in Wuhan, the capital of China’s Hubei province, in December 2019 and has since spread globally, especially to Europe and North America, resulting in the ongoing global coronavirus pandemic disaster of 2019–2020. Although most cases have mild symptoms, there is some progression to viral pneumonia and multi-organ failure and death. More than 4.6 million cases have been registered across 216 countries and territories as of 19 April 2020, resulting in more than 311,000 deaths. Risk to communities with continued widespread disease transmission depends on characteristics of the virus, including how well it spreads between people; the severity of resulting illness; and the medical or other measures available to control the impact of the virus (for example, vaccines or medications that can treat the illness) and the relative success of these. In the absence of vaccines or medications, non-pharmaceutical interventions were the most important response strategy based on community interventions such as person-to-person distancing, mask-wearing, isolation and good personal hygiene (hand-washing)—all of which have been demonstrated can reduce the impact of this seemingly unstoppable globally spreading natural disaster. This paper presents the results of quantitative research regarding the level of citizen preparedness for disasters caused by coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Serbia. The survey was conducted using a questionnaire that was requested and then collected online among 975 respondents during disaster in April 2020. The questionnaire examined citizens’ basic socio-economic and demographic characteristics, their knowledge, preparedness, risk perception and preventive measures taken individually and as a community to prevent the death and widespread transmission of novel coronavirus disease 2019 in the Republic of Serbia. Based on the findings that there are major differences in the public’s perception of risks posed by communicable disease threats such as presented by COVID-19, emergency management agencies should use these differences to develop targeted strategies to enhance community and national preparedness by promoting behavioral change and improving risk management decision-making.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 is a new strain of coronavirus that has not been previously identified in humans.Coronaviruses are zoonotic and are a large family of viruses that cause illness ranging from the common colds to more serious diseases, such as MERS and SARS [1]

  • The results were based on knowledge, preparedness, risk perception and preventive measures for coronavirus disease

  • Starting from the abovementioned methodological framework, the results were handled into four categories: Firstly, we tested the central hypothesis that gender, educational level and age were predictive variables of citizen preparedness for a pandemic disaster

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 is a new strain of coronavirus that has not been previously identified in humans. Coronaviruses are zoonotic and are a large family of viruses that cause illness ranging from the common colds to more serious diseases, such as MERS and SARS [1]. Compared with SARS and MERS, COVID-19 has spread more rapidly, mainly due to increased globalization and the focus of the epidemic [2]. COVID-19 may have acted differently from previous coronavirus epidemics. The lack of organized, systematic and scientific knowledge about COVID-19 caused anxieties on the part of individuals and governments as they were facing an unseen enemy around the world [3]. The main phenotype of this outbreak is the high rate of spread, age and increased vulnerability of low immune individuals and the differential rate of recovery [4]

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