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A new perspective from time use research on the effects of social restrictions on COVID-19 behavioral infection risk

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Gershuny, Jonathan
Sullivan, Oriel
Sevilla, Almudena
Foliano, Francesca
Lamote de Grignona, Juana
Harms, Teresa
Walthery, Pierre

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Public Library of Science
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We present findings from three waves of a population-representative, UK time-use diary survey conducted both pre- and in real time during full ‘lockdown’, and again following the easing of social restrictions. We used an innovative online diary instrument that has proved both reliable and quick-to-field. Combining diary information on activity, location, and co-presence to estimate infection risks associated with daily behavior, we show clear changes in risk-associated behavior between the pre, full-lockdown and post full-lockdown periods. We document a shift from more to less risky daily behavior patterns (combinations of activity/location/co-presence categories) between the pre-pandemic pattern and full lockdown in May/June 2020, followed by a reversion (although not a complete reversal) of those patterns in August 2020 following the end of the first lockdown. Because, in general, a populations’ time use changes relatively slowly, the behavioral changes revealed may be interpreted as a consequence of the UK COVID-19 lockdown social restrictions and their subsequent relaxation.

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Gershuny J, Sullivan O, Sevilla A, VegaRapun M, Foliano F, Lamote de Grignon J, et al. (2021) A new perspective from time use research on the effects of social restrictions on COVID-19 behavioral infection risk. PLoS ONE 16(2)

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