Understanding a constellation of eight COVID-19 disease prevention behaviours using the COM-B model and the Theoretical Domains Framework: a qualitative study using the Behaviour Change Wheel
Authors
Chater, Angel M.Brook-Rowland, Phoebe
Tolani, Foyeke
Christopher, Emily
Hart, Jo
Byrne-Davis, Lucie
Moffat, Abby
Shorter, Gillian
Epton, Tracy
Kamal, Atiya
O’Connor, Daryl B.
Whittaker, Eleanor
Lewis, Lesley
McBride, Emily
Swanson, Vivien
Arden, Madelynne A.
Affiliation
University of BedfordshireUniversity College London
Bedford Borough Council
University of Manchester
Queen's University Belfast
Birmingham City University
University of Leeds
North Yorkshire County Council
Somerset County Council
University of Stirling
Sheffield Hallam University
Issue Date
2023-07-05Subjects
COVID-19behaviour change
COM-B
TDF
disease prevention
Subject Categories::C841 Health Psychology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: The use of behavioural science and behaviour change within local authorities and public health has supported healthful change; as evidenced by its importance and contribution to reducing harm during the COVID-19 pandemic. It can provide valuable information to enable the creation of evidence-based intervention strategies, co-created with the people they are aimed at, in an effective and efficient manner. Aim: This study aimed to use the COM-B model to understand the Capability, Opportunity and Motivation of performing a constellation of eight COVID-19 disease prevention behaviours related to the slogans of ‘Hands, Face, Space, Fresh Air’; ‘Find, Isolate, Test, (FIT), and Vaccinate’ in those employed in workplaces identified as high risk for transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) to support intervention development. Method: This qualitative study recruited twenty-three participants (16 female, 7 male), who were interviewed from three environments (schools, care homes, warehouses) across three local authorities. Semi-structured interviews were analysed using thematic analysis. Findings: Ten core themes were identified inductively; 1) Knowledge and skills, 2) Regulating the behaviour, 3) Willingness to act, 4) Necessity and concerns, 5) Emotional impact, 6) Conducive environment, 7) Societal influence, 8) No longer united against COVID-19, 9) Credible leadership, and 10) Inconsistent adherence to COVID-19 prevention behaviours. Themes were then deductively mapped to the COM-B model of behaviour change and the Theoretical Domains Framework and a logic model using the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW: Michie et al., 2011; 2014) was produced to inform intervention design. Conclusion: This study offers a novel approach to analysis that has included eight behaviours within a single thematic analysis and COM-B diagnosis. This will enable local authorities to direct limited resources to overarching priorities. Of key importance, was the need for supportive and credible leadership, alongside developing interventions collaboratively with the target audience. COVID-19 has had an emotional toll on those interviewed, however, promoting the value of disease prevention behaviours, over and above their costs, can facilitate behaviour. Developing knowledge and skills, through education, training, marketing and modelling can further facilitate behaviour. This supports guidance produced by the British Psychological Society COVID-19 Behavioural Science and Disease Prevention Taskforce.Citation
Chater AM, Brook-Rowland P, Tolani F, Christopher E, Hart J, Byrne-Davis LMT, Moffat A, Shorter G, Epton T, Kamal A, O’Connor DB, Whittaker E, Lewis LJM, McBride E, Swanson V, Arden MA (2023) 'Understanding a constellation of eight COVID-19 disease prevention behaviours using the COM-B model and the Theoretical Domains Framework: a qualitative study using the Behaviour Change Wheel', Frontiers in Public Health, (11), 1130875Journal
Frontiers in Public HealthPubMed ID
37475767PubMed Central ID
PMC10355219Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2296-2565EISSN
2296-2565Sponsors
Bedford, MK, CBC CouncilsThis research was funded by Bedford Borough, Central Bedfordshire and Milton Keynes Councils, internally led by FT and EC, awarded to AMC at the ISPAR Centre for Health, Wellbeing and Behaviour Change, University of Bedfordshire. It was informed by the work of the British Psychological Society COVID-19 Behavioural Science and Disease Prevention Taskforce, which partially funded AMC time.
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3389/fpubh.2023.1130875
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- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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