Mask wearing as a prosocial behavior: Proposing and testing the moral norms activation model
Monique M. Turner, Youjin Jang, Ruth Heo, Qijia Ye, Rachel Wade, Maria Knight Lapinski, Tai-Quan Peng

TL;DR
This study explores how moral norms and guilt influence mask-wearing during the pandemic, showing how awareness and social values can drive public health behaviors.
Contribution
The study introduces the Moral Norms Activation Model, a novel framework linking moral norms and prosocial health behaviors.
Findings
Awareness of consequences directly predicts moral norms, which influence prosocial behaviors like mask-wearing.
Anticipated guilt mediates the relationship between moral norms and health behaviors.
Perceived severity and collective orientation strengthen the link between moral norms and behavior.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to develop and test a model of prosocial prevention behavior during COVID-19, termed the Moral Norms Activation Model (MNAM). This model examines how moral norms, influenced by awareness of consequences, predict prosocial prevention behaviors, such as mask-wearing, and the role of perceived severity and collective orientation as moderating factors. We conducted a survey during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic with a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults (N = 8,778). The survey measured awareness of consequences, moral norms, anticipated guilt, perceived severity, collective orientation, and self-reported mask-wearing behavior. A series of regressions was used to test the proposed model and interactions. Findings supported the MNAM, demonstrating that awareness of consequences was a significant direct predictor of moral norms. These moral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion · Behavioral Health and Interventions
