The Dutch Citizen's Understanding and Perception of the Actors Involved in the Netherlands' COVID‐19 Pandemic Response: A Focus Group Study During the First Pandemic Wave
L. S. Kengne Kamga, A. C. G. Voordouw, M. C. De Vries, E. Belfroid, A. E. M. Brabers, J. D. De Jong, L. C. van Eck, M. P. G. Koopmans, A. Timen

TL;DR
This study explores how Dutch citizens understood the actors involved in the country's early response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Contribution
It reveals a gap in public awareness of the full range of actors in pandemic decision-making and the citizens' own role.
Findings
Participants were unaware of the full scope of actors involved in the pandemic response.
Most recognized their role in limiting virus spread but few mentioned themselves as key actors.
Participants expressed a desire for more information to form informed opinions about pandemic decisions.
Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic was a public health emergency (PHE) of unprecedented magnitude and impact. It provided the possibility to investigate the Dutch citizens' understanding and perception of the actors involved in the Dutch pandemic response as a PHE unfolded. Three focus groups (FGs) were held with 16 Dutch citizens in June 2020. Citizens were recruited using the Dutch Health Care Consumer Panel. During the FGs, participants were asked to fill in a table with actors they thought were involved in the management of the COVID‐19 pandemic. They also received information on actors involved in Dutch outbreak responses. Then, the actors named and omitted by the participants were discussed. An analysis of the FGs suggests that the Dutch citizens participating in the study were not fully aware of the scope of actors involved in the Dutch COVID‐19 pandemic response. Some participants would…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts · COVID-19 and Mental Health · COVID-19 epidemiological studies
