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The inhibitors and enablers of emerging adult COVID-19 mitigation compliance in a township context

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posted on 2022-11-11, 16:31 authored by Linda C Theron, Diane T Levine, Michael Ungar
Young adults are often scapegoated for not complying with COVID-19 mitigation strategies. While studies have investigated what predicts this population’s compliance and non-compliance, they have largely excluded the insights of African young people living in South African townships. Given this, it is unclear what places young adult South African township dwellers at risk for not complying with physical distancing, face masking and handwashing, or what enables resilience to those risks. To remedy this uncertainty, the current article reports a secondary analysis of transcripts (n=119) that document telephonic interviews in June and October 2020 with 24 emerging adults (average age: 20 years) who participated in the Resilient Youth in Stressed Environments (RYSE) study. The secondary analysis, which was inductively thematic, pointed to compliance being threatened by forgetfulness; preventive measures conflicting with personal/collective style; and structural constraints. Resilience to these compliance risks lay in young people’s capacity to regulate their behaviour and in the immediate social ecology’s capacity to co-regulate young people’s health behaviours. These findings discourage health interventions that are focused on the individual. More optimal public health initiatives will be responsive to the risks and resilience-enablers associated with young people and the social, institutional, and physical ecologies to which young people are connected.

Funding

Canadian Institutes of Health Research (grant: IP2- 150708), University of Leicester’s QR Global Challenges Research Fund (Research England: S15HP10)

History

Citation

Theron LC, Levine DT, Ungar M. The inhibitors and enablers of emerging adult COVID-19 mitigation compliance in a township context. S Afr J Sci. 2022;118(5/6), Art. #13173. https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2022/13173

Author affiliation

Leicester Institute of Advanced Studies

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

South African Journal of Science

Volume

118

Issue

5/6

Pagination

13173

Publisher

Academy of Science of South Africa

eissn

1996-7489

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-11-11

Language

en

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