Objective: Characterize college student COVID-19 behaviors and attitudes during the early pandemic. Students on two university campuses in Wisconsin.
Methods: Surveys administered in September and November 2020.
Results: Few students (3-19%) participated in most in-person activities during the semester, with eating at restaurants as the exception (72-80%) and attending work (35%) and parties (33%) also reported more frequently. The majority wore masks in public (94-99%), but comparatively fewer (42%) did so at parties. Mask-wearing at parties decreased from September to November ( < 0.05). Students attending parties, or consuming more alcohol, were less concerned and more likely to take COVID-19-associated risks.
Conclusions: Students were motivated to adhere to COVID-19 prevention measures but gathered socially. Though there was frequent public masking, mask-wearing at parties declined in November and may represent pandemic fatigue. High-yield strategies for decreasing viral spread may include changing masking social norms and engaging with students about creative risk-reduction strategies.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11359481 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07448481.2022.2080504 | DOI Listing |
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