Assessing levels of knowledge, compliance with preventive measures and behavioral adjustments to the ‘new normal’ of COVID-19: Empirical evidence from Ghana
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Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology
Abstract
Countries have managed COVID-19 infection and mortality differently. Ghana, a resource-constrained country,
with a poorer healthcare system, had fewer infections and more recoveries than high-income countries. Although
an acculturation framework is commonly discussed in relation to individuals adapting to a new society, we used
it to understand how people adapt to rapid changes orchestrated by the COVID-19 pandemic. From pre-pandemic
to post-pandemic era, we see a change from the ‘old normal’ to the ‘new normal’. Thus, we sought to understand
how people were living their lives under the ‘new normal’. Data was gathered from 416 adults on their attitudes
towards obedience to authority, compliance with COVID-19-related activities, and changes in the extent of
carrying out these activities three and nine months into the pandemic. COVID-19 acculturation strategies were
also assessed. Descriptive and inferential analyses showed that most Ghanaians obeyed authorities and followed
the preventive measures. However, after five months of the peak period, compliance dropped, and behavioral
fatigue increased significantly. Regarding the acculturation strategies integration, which involves keeping old
health care practices and adopting new ones, improved behavioral adjustment the most followed by separation
(i.e., rejecting the new health care practices and holding on strongly to the old ones) and assimilation (i.e.,
rejecting old health care practices and adopting new ones). Marginalization which encompasses rejecting both
old and new health care practices was the least. These results suggest that integration strategy had a significant
positive impact on behavioral adjustment compared to assimilation and separation strategies.
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Research Article
