4.5 Article

Exploration of COVID-19 Pandemic Prevention Behaviors among Healthcare Workers

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare11020153

Keywords

COVID-19; workplace safety climate; health belief model; pandemic prevention behaviors

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Since the outbreak of COVID-19, compliance with preventive behaviors has become crucial for reducing the rapid spread of the pandemic. This study proposed an integrative model that explained and predicted COVID-19 preventive behaviors among healthcare workers. The study found that workplace safety climate influenced health belief factors, which in turn influenced safety attitudes. Safety attitudes affected safety compliance, and safety compliance further affected safety satisfaction. The findings highlight the importance of workplace safety climate in strengthening healthcare workers' health beliefs and promoting their adherence to preventive measures.
Since the outbreak of COVID-19, the pandemic has become an important topic of global public health. To reduce the rapid spread of the pandemic, compliance with preventive behaviors has become one of the important guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO). Healthcare workers stand on the frontline for pandemic prevention, and preventive behaviors are essential measures to protect their health and safety. The purpose of this study was to propose an integrative model that explained and predicted COVID-19 preventive behaviors among healthcare workers. The study integrated workplace safety climate and the health belief model (HBM) to verify the impact of workplace safety climate and health belief factors on the safety attitude, safety compliance, and safety satisfaction of healthcare workers performing COVID-19 pandemic prevention behaviors. A cross-sectional study was conducted from March to August 2021 with a self-administered online questionnaire. The sample of the study was drawn from healthcare workers of a famous medical institution in Taipei City as research subjects. After collecting 273 valid questionnaires and verifying them through the analysis of structural equation modeling (SEM), the findings revealed that workplace safety climate had an impact on health belief factors, and then health belief factors had impacts on safety attitudes. In addition, safety attitude affected safety compliance, while safety compliance further affected safety satisfaction. The study showed that workplace safety climate can strengthen healthcare workers' health beliefs and further affect their safety attitudes, safety compliance, and safety satisfaction. The study attempted to propose a model of healthcare workers' pandemic prevention behaviors as a reference for medical facility administrators in real practice.

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