id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-321193-c0g999r1 Goodwin, Robin Anxiety and public responses to covid-19: Early data from Thailand 2020-06-30 .txt text/plain 2644 175 54 We examined anxiety, symptom awareness, trust and associated behavioural responses in the first three weeks of the SARS-CoV-2 (covid-19) outbreak in Thailand. In common with other coronavirus outbreaks 36 including SARS (Washer, 2004) , and influenza strain H1N1 ('swine flu') (Goodwin et al, 2011) , anxiety 37 associated with the virus has contributed towards societal disruption in Thailand, as community 38 relations become strained, and groups associated with the epidemic suffer discrimination (Boolert, Participants. Table 1 shows the most common responses to open-ended questions on 80 symptoms, preventive behaviours, and trust in information sources. Controlling for sex and age grouping those most anxious were more 90 likely to avoid crowds, Chinese people, those coughing, and public transport/flying. We report data on awareness of 104 symptoms, anxiety, trust and associated behavioural responses three to five weeks into the epidemic 105 in this country. Anxiety and trust towards different information 125 sources were associated with preventive health and economic behaviours. ./cache/cord-321193-c0g999r1.txt ./txt/cord-321193-c0g999r1.txt