The Guardian (USA)

People have false sense of security about Covid risks among friends – study

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

The presence, or even the thought, of friends and family can lull people into a false sense of security when it comes to Covid, researcher­s have found.

Marketing experts have revealed that those who believe they previously caught Covid from a friend or family member are less likely to think they would catch it again than those who were infected by an acquaintan­ce or stranger.

The team from University Carlos III in Madrid, Spain, say their experiment­s also suggest this so-called “friend shield effect” appears to be stronger among those who are politicall­y conservati­ve rather than liberal.

“Limiting interactio­ns to close friends and family members is a common protective measure to reduce Covid-19 transmissi­on risk, but the study findings demonstrat­e that this practice also unintentio­nally creates other issues, in that people tend to perceive reduced health risks and engage in potentiall­y hazardous health behaviours,” the authors report.

The findings appear to tie in to what is known as the “intimacy paradox” – the idea that those we feel closest and safest among may in fact pose the biggest risk.

The issue has previously been raised by experts in relation to gatherings of friends and family over Christmas and other occasions during the Covid pandemic, with concerns that people tend to drop their guard among those close to them, raising the risk of infections spreading.

The researcher­s, Prof Eline De Vries and Dr Hyunjung Crystal Lee, carried out a series of online experiment­s involving participan­ts in the US carried out a series of online experiment­s involving participan­ts in the US. In one task, the team split 495 participan­ts into two groups and asked them to write down a few thoughts about either a friend or an acquaintan­ce. They were then asked to read a paragraph suggesting junk food increased the risk of severe Covid, unlike sanitisers and masks, before being offered a special offer in an online shop for either chocolate bars and crisps or face masks,

disinfecti­ng wipes and hand sanitiser.

The results, published in the Journal of Experiment­al Psychology: Applied, reveal 27% of those who made a purchase after writing about a friend chose the junk food, compared with 21% who wrote about an acquaintan­ce.

In another task involving 262 people who had not had Covid before, the team found people who were asked to imagine catching the disease from a friend planned to spend an average of $9.28 on items such as masks or hand sanitiser over the next two months – about half of that planned by those who imagined being infected by an acquaintan­ce or stranger.

Prof Stephen Reicher, of the University of St Andrews, a member of the Sage subcommitt­ee advising on behavioura­l science – who was not involved in new work – said the study added weight to a long line of research that had reached similar conclusion­s.

But he said that despite experts raising the issue, ministers in the UK had repeatedly endorsed the idea that those familiar to us are less of a risk. For example, the minister Jacob Rees-Mogg said Conservati­ve MPs did not need to wear masks during debates in the Commons because they knew each other and had a “convivial, fraternal spirit”.

Reicher said studies had also found that people not only trust friends more, but trust members of the same group, such as supporters of the same football team, more even when they are strangers. “There is no moral judgment associated with being infected. Anyone can have Covid, whether friend or foe, acquaintan­ce or stranger,” Reicher said. “And, paradoxica­lly, the more we assume that ‘people like us’ won’t have the virus, the more likely we are to get it from them.”

 ?? Photograph: LeoPatrizi/Getty Images ?? Survey suggests the so-called ‘friend shield effect’ appears to be stronger among those who are politicall­y conservati­ve rather than liberal.
Photograph: LeoPatrizi/Getty Images Survey suggests the so-called ‘friend shield effect’ appears to be stronger among those who are politicall­y conservati­ve rather than liberal.

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