Cultural values predict national COVID-19 death rates

被引:6
|
作者
Damian J. Ruck
Joshua Borycz
R. Alexander Bentley
机构
[1] Advai Ltd,Sarah Shannon Stevenson Science and Engineering Library
[2] Vanderbilt University,Anthropology Department
[3] University Tennessee,undefined
来源
SN Social Sciences | / 1卷 / 3期
关键词
Computational social science; Development; Cultural evolution; Health policy;
D O I
10.1007/s43545-021-00080-2
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
National responses to a pandemic require populations to comply through personal behaviors that occur in a cultural context. Here we show that aggregated cultural values of nations, derived from World Values Survey data, have been at least as important as top-down government actions in predicting the impact of COVID-19. At the population level, the cultural factor of cosmopolitanism, together with obesity, predict higher numbers of deaths in the first two months of COVID-19 on the scale of nations. At the state level, the complementary variables of government efficiency and public trust in institutions predict lower death numbers. The difference in effect between individual beliefs and behaviors, versus state-level actions, suggests that open cosmopolitan societies may face greater challenges in limiting a future pandemic or other event requiring a coordinated national response among the population. More generally, mass cultural values should be considered in crisis preparations.
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