The effect of primary school education on preventive behaviours during COVID-19 in Japan
Eiji Yamamura, Yoshiro Tsutsui, Fumio Ohtake

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term impact of primary school hand-washing education on adults' COVID-19 preventive behaviors in Japan over 30 months, finding sustained positive associations for hand washing and mask wearing.
Contribution
It provides longitudinal evidence that childhood hand-washing education has a lasting effect on specific preventive behaviors during a pandemic, extending previous short-term studies.
Findings
Hand-washing education is positively associated with hand washing and mask wearing.
The effect on hand washing persisted throughout the 30-month period.
No significant effect was found on staying at home.
Abstract
Education plays a critical role on promoting preventive behaviours against the spread of pandemics. In Japan, hand-washing education in primary schools was positively correlated with preventive behaviours against COVID-19 transmission for adults in 2020 during the early stages of COVID-19 [1]. The following year, the Tokyo Olympics were held in Japan, and a state of emergency was declared several times. Public perceptions of and risks associated with the pandemic changed drastically with the emergence of COVID-19 vaccines. We re-examine whether effect of hand-washing education on preventive behaviours persisted by covering a longer period of the COVID-19 pandemic than previous studies. 26 surveys were conducted nearly once a month for 30 months from March 2020 (the early stage of COVID-19) to September 2022 in Japan. By corresponding with the same individuals across surveys, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts · Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
