Dramatic increases in knowledge, attitudes and practices of COVID-19 observed among low-income households in the Philippines: A repeated cross-sectional study in 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted populations globally, and knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAPs) surrounding the virus have necessarily evolved.
by caremin
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted populations globally, and knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAPs) surrounding the virus have necessarily evolved. This study was conducted in partnership with International Care Ministries (ICM), a Philippine-based non-governmental organization that runs the “Transform” poverty alleviation program. The main objective of this study was to describe the changes in COVID-19 KAPs among households experiencing extreme poverty in the Philippines over an 8-month period.
A KAP questionnaire was integrated into the household survey collected as part of ICM’s regular monitoring and evaluation of “Transform”. Data collection for the first survey was conducted between February 20 and March 13, 2020, and the second survey was conducted between November 12 and December 12, 2020. Frequencies and proportions were calculated to describe the respondents’ responses and the Kruskal-Wallis test was used to assess if there were significant differences in KAP identification between the two time points.
Authors
Lincoln L Lau, Natalee Hung, Daryn J Go, Mia Choi, Warren Dodd, Xiaolin Wei
Introduction
COVID-19 has spread wider and persisted for longer than most people expected, but the end of the pandemic is still far from sight. Virtually no country has been left untouched by COVID-19, with most having experienced multiple waves of iinfections and the unintended consequences of imposing a series of measures to control its spread [1]. In the Philippines, when community transmission of the virus was detected towards the end of February 2020 [2], the government rapidly imposed sweeping enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) measures, including strict stay-at-home orders, curfews, the suspension of public transport and any operation of economic activity that was deemed “non-essential” [3].
For many regions in the Philippines, especially those considered “high-risk”, these measures were in place for months, but the consequences of limiting economic activity led to the loosening of lockdown restrictions in May 2020 [4]. However, an accelerated spread of the virus soon followed, with a daily average of over 2000 incident cases of COVID-19 from July to September 2020, more than double the figures in June 2020 [2]. Hospitals, especially in the national capital region, came close to full capacity [5,6]. To ease the burdens on the health care system, ECQ measures were reimposed in August 2020, with modifications to allow some industries to operate at reduced capacities [4]. With a return to stay-at-home orders and restrictions on economic activity, life was significantly disrupted for most of the population in the Philippines, with magnified effects for those without fixed incomes or savings to sustain living costs [7].
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