Volume 44 - Article 20 | Pages 459–480  

Knowledge, risk perceptions, and behaviors related to the COVID-19 pandemic in Malawi

By Jethro Banda, Albert Dube, Sarah Brumfield, Abena Amoah, Amelia Crampin, Georges Reniers, Stephane Helleringer

Abstract

Background: Behavioral changes are needed to limit the spread and mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Objective: We measured knowledge and behaviors related to COVID-19 during the early stages of the pandemic in Malawi (Southeast Africa).

Methods: Using lists of phone numbers collected prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, we contacted a sample of adults by mobile phone in the six weeks after the first confirmed cases of COVID-19 were recorded in the country. We interviewed 619 respondents (79.5% response rate).

Results: Approximately half of respondents perceived no risk or only limited risk that they would become infected with the novel coronavirus. Contrary to projections from epidemiological models, a large percentage of respondents (72.2%) expected to be severely ill if they became infected. Increased hand washing and avoiding crowds were the most frequently reported strategies used to prevent spreading SARS-CoV-2. The adoption of other protective behaviors (e.g., face masks) was limited. Respondents in urban areas had more accurate knowledge of disease patterns and had adopted more protective behaviors than rural respondents.

Conclusions: In the first weeks of the pandemic, the adoption of preventive behaviors remained limited in Malawi, possibly due to low perceived risk of infection among a large fraction of the population. Additional information campaigns are needed to address misperceptions about the risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2 and the likelihood of severe illness due to COVID-19.

Contribution: This study provides early data on behavioral responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in a low-income country.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Transitions to adulthood in men and women in rural Malawi in the 21st century using sequence analysis: Some evidence of delay
Volume 51 - Article 14

Age patterns of under-5 mortality in sub-Saharan Africa during 1990‒2018: A comparison of estimates from demographic surveillance with full birth histories and the historic record
Volume 44 - Article 18

Improving age measurement in low- and middle-income countries through computer vision: A test in Senegal
Volume 40 - Article 9

Estimating mortality from external causes using data from retrospective surveys: A validation study in Niakhar (Senegal)
Volume 38 - Article 32

Sexual networks, partnership mixing, and the female-to-male ratio of HIV infections in generalized epidemics: An agent-based simulation study
Volume 33 - Article 15

The Likoma Network Study: Context, data collection and initial results
Volume 21 - Article 15

Polygyny and HIV in Malawi
Volume 19 - Article 53

Divorce and Remarriage in Rural Malawi
Special Collection 1 - Article 6

An Assessment of the KDICP and MDICP Data Quality: Interviewer Effects, Question Reliability and Sample Attrition
Special Collection 1 - Article 2

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women’s care work and employment in the Middle East and North Africa
Volume 51 - Article 15    | Keywords: care work, COVID-19, Middle East, North Africa, women's employment

Transitions to adulthood in men and women in rural Malawi in the 21st century using sequence analysis: Some evidence of delay
Volume 51 - Article 14    | Keywords: Africa, Health and Demographic Surveillance System, longitudinal analysis, Malawi, sequence analysis, transition to adulthood

Trajectories of US parents’ divisions of domestic labor throughout the COVID-19 pandemic
Volume 51 - Article 12    | Keywords: childcare, COVID-19, division of labor, fathers, gender, housework, mothers

Lessons from the pandemic: Gender inequality in childcare and the emergence of a gender mental health gap among parents in Germany
Volume 51 - Article 3    | Keywords: COVID-19, division of childcare, exhaustion, gender role attitudes, loneliness, mental health, pandemic, stress

Measuring short-term mobility patterns in North America using Facebook advertising data, with an application to adjusting COVID-19 mortality rates
Volume 50 - Article 10    | Keywords: COVID-19, data collection, Facebook, mortality, North America, short-term mobility