key: cord- -nlmta po authors: costa-font, joan title: review of ‘knowledge resistance. how avoid insight from others’ by mikael klintman, manchester university press, , pages, manchester, retail price . £ date: - - journal: j behav exp econ doi: . /j.socec. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nlmta po nan in an ideal world, we would only absorb valid knowledge claims and resist false or unproven ones. however, knowledge acquisition is far from the simple process of information transmission described by 'rational expectations' models. this is why the study of how individuals learn is at the core of behavioral economics. understanding learning entails a identifying the root causes of 'knowledge resistance'. this book is a step in that direction. mikael klintman in this book discusses several different explanations for knowledge resistance drawing on evidence from several social sciences, and especially, on behavioral economics. borrowing from nietzsche ( ) , the author distinguishes between 'dionysian' tendencies in knowledge acquisition, which are driven by passion and groupcenteredness, and 'apollonian', or rational and fact-oriented ones. a classification that compares to kahneman's thinking fast and slow approach (kahneman, ) . accordingly, knowledge's resistance can be explained by dionysian tendencies of group loyalty that encourage us not to deviate from our local culture (and its dominant ideology). another explanation, at the core of behavioural economics, lies in the influence of 'negativity bias' (an evolutionary tendency to pay more attention to negative information to increase our chances of survival) on our beliefs, which makes us pay more attention to the risks of certain behaviors, and resist knowledge about their associated benefits. central to the book is the claim that when individuals differ in their cultural values, they naturally exhibit social incentives to knowledge claims. this phenomenon responds to a clear evolutionary advantage, namely the fact that a better adaptation to the local cultural norms increases the chances of survival and reproduction. hence, an utter motivaion of knowledge resistance is that of strengthening the bonds within groups', thus enhancing collaboration. the logic in such a setting (according to the author), is that that the more the beliefs of one group deviate from that of others, the stronger their group cohesion. in other words, there is warmth in sensing something 'unique' that others do not sense. this explains the creation of 'knowledge tribes', which are instrumental in explaining knowledge resistance. the problem lies when knowledge and moral claims overlap. this is typically the what happens when individuals form beliefs on contentious issues such as global warming, or child smacking, which are divisive issues in society. however, such divisions are mostly a reflection of people's moral values, especially at the extremes of the ideological debate. for instance, progressives are more likely to neglect findings that challenge organic agriculture, whilst conservatives are more likely to challenge evidence that 'smacking' has adverse effects on children's mental wellbeing. knowledge resistance comes from how people frame such morally divisive problems. a common behavioral mechanism is the use of backward induction in learning. that is, individuals tend to make a choice of their 'desired conclusion', and work out their arguments backwards. people anchor their views on priors, and search for arguments that confirm and strengthen their priors (which we define as 'confirmation bias'). for instance, some research shows that individuals anchor their attitudes to nuclear power on political values (costa- font, rudisill & mossialos, ) . others, in the context of covid , anchor their values on the economic consequences of government decisions such as lockdowns alone. the author strongest claim is to argue that 'knowledge resistance is universal'. although, in the thurst of a public discussion, individuals commonly tend to accuse each other of being 'knowledge resistant'the truth is that, when social interests are in conflict with factual knowledge, they tend to choose to satisfy their our social interests. contrary to comon beliefs, human beings have not evolved to be 'knowledge maximisers'. far from it, we are sensitive to the social incentives such as in the form of status that come from group collaboration. this can be explained by some form of 'behavioural learning' such as loss-aversion. indeed, lose averse individuals are more likely to weigh less the costs from following knowledge facts, and betraying their groups loyalties. another important point that the book makes is that intelligence ('defined as the ability to accomplish complex goals'), contrary to one would expect, makes people more (rather than less) 'competent knowledge resisters'. this is epitomized by the goal of 'winning an argument', which often overrides 'getting the facts right'. ignorance can be purposefully chosen. for instance, individuals might prefer not know the gender of their children before birth, or their personal genetic predisposition to some life threatening condition. ignorance in this context, is consistent with a growing literature about why people prefer to follow non-knowledgeable beliefs, or what is known as 'rational irrationality' (caplan, a) . when learning does not bring expected pay-offs (e.g., kills the hopes of a preferred child gender or, of a disease free future), it might be rational to develop some form of non-rational beliefs. this can explain the way people vote (caplan, b) , or the formation of beliefs about new technologies individuals don't know much about (costa- font & mossialos, ) . in the context of life under covid- , it can explain the spread of fake news on the effects of the pandemic, or the consequences on the shortages of essential products. finally, an important lesson the book refers to recurrently refers to people's sensitivity to framing biases. for instance, when knowledge is specifically pitched to different cultural values (e.g., climate change can be presented as way to keep tradition among conservatives, and as an intergenerational equity matter among progressives), the message has more chances to be internalised . hence, framing can help avoiding conflict between what the author calls 'social', and 'substantive' rationality. however, the book does not discuss how such reframing and cultural adaptation should take place, and perhaps does not stress enough its complexities. i would argue, it is the role of a behavioral economist to study what choice architecture supports knowledge acquisition, given individual specific contextual constraints. rational irrationality and the microfoundations of political failure rational ignorance versus rational irrationality the public as a limit to technology transfer: the influence of knowledge and beliefs in attitudes towards biotechnology in the uk attitudes as an expression of knowledge and "political anchoring": the case of nuclear power in the united kingdom thinking, fast and slow the birth of tragedy and the genealogy of morals doubleday although the book does not attempt to have the last word of what stands behind knowledge resistance, it portrays a number of implicit policy recommendations. i would highlight three which are naturally presented in the last chapter, namely:• knowledge is socially produced, and collaboration between 'moral tribes' is needed to minimize knowledge resistance.• ignorance can be creative, the views of the 'newcomers' to a field can enhance knowledge building, and ultimately expand our freedom.• as a society, we should reward. both socially. and financially, the collaboration between individuals upholding different social values and cultures, especially in the process of knowledge production.this presents a 'bigger picture' about why, and how human beings 'resist knowledge', and what to do about it. the interdisciplinary nature of the book inevitably comes with limited precision, and will not satisfy disciplinary scholars . but it is an excellent contribution to the understanding of the social barriers to knowledge transfer, which is a question no discipline on its own can solve. supplementary material associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at doi: . /j.socec. . . key: cord- -y ii r u authors: van assche, ari; lundan, sarianna title: from the editor: covid- and international business policy date: - - journal: j int bus policy doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y ii r u we introduce a special collection of papers on covid- and international business policy that looks at the global policy challenge from different perspectives. the combination of confinement and protectionist measures including export bans, import tariffs and border closures that were introduced in response to the covid- pandemic affect mnes by increasing trade costs and amplifying the costs of communicating tacit knowledge. in this editorial, we draw specific attention to how these policies impact the heart of mnes’ activities – the knowledge-intensive intangibles. physical distancing limits the face-to-face meetings that undergird the production of intangibles in large urban hotspots. at the same time, travel restrictions constrain mnes’ abilities to connect to and source knowledge from their foreign partners. virtual conferencing has helped mnes to cope with these challenges but it remains an imperfect substitute. a protracted public health crisis that would require limiting social interactions in the medium term might push mnes to reconfigure their knowledge management strategies both locally and globally. in , the academy of international business launched the ambitious project of adding a public policy journal to its line of publications -the journal of international business policy. the rationale was that international business scholars have a deep knowledge about how the economic landscape influences firm behavior and vice versa, and this knowledge can be highly valuable in policy discussions (lundan, ) . the goal of the journal was therefore to promote a policy turn in international business research by pushing scholars to not only reflect on the implications of their research for managers, but also to investigate the societal implications of their studies (van assche, ) . the timing of the launch was auspicious as it coincided with a period where international business policy mounted to the forefront of public policy discussions. populism had been rising on both sides of the atlantic in the wake of the great recession of [ ] [ ] , which fed a wave of antitrade sentiment (rodrik, ) . several government leaders jumped on the populist bandwagon by throwing their support behind export mercantilism (evenett, ) , renegotiating or leaving trade agreements, and initiating trade wars (bown & irwin, ) . international business (ib) scholars were quick to seize the moment and have in ten jibp journal issues put their own stamp on ib policy debates in an era of ''slowbalization''. the ''great lockdown'' related to the covid- pandemic is yet another policy challenge that can benefit from insights from ib scholarship. the instigator of the acute economic downturns across the globe is not the health crisis as such, but rather the policy response that has been remarkable in its suddenness, magnitude and synchronicity across countries. to halt the spread of the disease, governments have adopted extraordinary containment policies to flatten the epidemiological curve, that is, to slow the rate of new covid- infections in order to ease the burden on local health facilities. when the epidemic initially hit, governments put a hard stop on economic activity by suspending operations of non-essential businesses, by closing international borders to nonessential traffic, and by implementing stringent stay-at-home orders. once the initial outbreak was contained, countries have gradually loosened restrictions on those non-essential businesses where virus transmission can be more easily controlled. lockdown exit strategies have varied substantially across countries and regions, but a common element is that physical distancing measures will need to remain in place until a vaccine or treatment becomes available. policy is also central to countries' efforts to cope with the resulting economic crisis. governments have adopted a mix of fiscal, monetary and financial policies to avoid economic collapse related to the ''hard stop'' containment policies (baldwin, ) . as of april , japan and the united states have committed to fiscal stimulus packages that already exceed percent of their annual gross domestic products (elgin, basbug, & yalaman, ) . international business policies have been part of the mix. past experiences have shown that governments turn to protectionism during economic downturns (evenett, ) , and this time is no different. when the epidemic initially hit, several countries reacted to global shortfalls of personal protective equipment and testing kits by banning or limiting the export of medical equipment and medicines (evenett, ) . once the attention turned from infection containment to economic recovery, several governments have switched to more traditional mercantilist policies by imposing import tariffs, putting into place ''buy domestic'' measures and adopting export subsidies (bown, ) . most countries in the world have imposed partial or complete border closures to foreign nationals during the coronavirus outbreak (chugh, ) . businesses -including multinational enterprises (mnes) -have been left scrambling trying to respond to the new policy reality. much has been written about distilleries, textile companies and automotive firms that have ventured into the production of hand sanitizers, masks and ventilators (fleming, ) . other studies have pointed out that firms are reorganizing their global value chains by reshoring production, diversifying their supplier base and adopting industry . technologies (javorcik, ; kilic & marin, ; seric & winkler, ) . while these initial insights are valuable, it is fair to say that extant studies have only scratched the surface. our understanding of the complex twoway interaction between covid- -related policies and ib remains murky and can benefit from fresh insights originating from ib scholarship. for this reason, we in early april contacted several leading scholars in ib and adjacent fields and asked them to provide their thoughts on the impact of the covid- pandemic on international business both in the short and medium run. our aim is to publish these articles in a jibp special collection on covid- and international business policy that will span the next two issues of the journal. in this editorial, we introduce the special collection by drawing the attention of jibp readers to the impact of covid- -related policies that strike at the heart of mnes -the knowledge-intensive intangibles -as their managers rush to cope with local physical distancing measures, non-essential travel restrictions and stringent immigration policies. at the end of the article, we also provide an overview of the first four papers that are included in the special collection. of intangibles in a recent book, baldwin ( ) divided the history of globalization into three periods: the pre-globalization period (before ) when both trade and communication costs were high, the first unbundling period ( - ) when trade costs dropped but communication costs remained high, and the second unbundling period ( -present) when both trade and communication costs became low (see figure ) . he argued that each period has organized production and consumption in a different way, affecting trade and foreign investment flows. the pre-globalized period was effectively a phase of autarky. high trade and communication costs isolated production and consumption to such a degree that the global economy was little more than a patchwork of local ecosystems that took care of themselves. while there was some international business (e.g., china's silk road trade), it had only a limited impact on a country's aggregate performance. the arrival of steamships and railroads in the nineteenth century substantially lowered the cost of long-distance transportation. with cheaper international shipping, more consumers started buying faraway goods, allowing for the gradual separation of production and consumption. this first unbundling period led to a spurt in international business, but the high communication costs across borders confined production processes within countries. globalization accelerated again at the end of the twentieth century, when the ict revolution slashed the cost of communicating codifiable information at a distance. this instigated globalization's second unbundling period, which involved the international fragmentation of production. improvements in communication technology now made it feasible and profitable to coordinate production activities across different countries, allowing for the emergence of global value chains. ib scholarship has brought to the table several refinements that have enriched this depiction of globalization. first, it has highlighted the central role that mnes have played in driving change over the two unbundling periods. as mne managers observed shifts in the costs and risks of doing business abroad, they reassessed how to compete, where to extend their geographical footprint and which activities to conduct within firm boundaries (buckley & strange, ; verbeke, coeurderoy, & matt, ) . it is mnes' adoption of new forms of intra-and inter-organizational arrangements on the micro-level that instigated shifts in macro trade and investment flows. second, ib scholarship has emphasized that mnes not only adapt the tangible parts of their activities -the production, trade and sale of physical goods -but also the intangibles which are at the heart of mne operations. intangibles are those claims to future benefits that do not have a physical or financial embodiment (lev, ) . highly knowledge-intensive in nature, they include the intellectual property, brand equity and other economic competencies that provide mnes the economic power to set product strategy, place orders, and take financial responsibility for the goods and services that their supply chains turn out (sturgeon, ; teece, ) . the drop in communication costs during the second unbundling period has pushed mnes to not only fragment production internationally but also to globalize the production of intangibles. a highly influential ib literature describes the complex global knowledge management strategies that mnes adopt to transfer and exploit existing repositories of knowledge around the world and to engage in the exploration of new knowledge (alcácer, cantwell & piscitello, ; cantwell, ; kogut & zander, ) . one of the reasons these knowledge management strategies are complex is that mnes need to consider the paradoxical geography of knowledge creation which is both concentrated in few local hotspots and increasingly global (lorenzen, mudambi & schotter, ) . the tacit nature of much of the knowledge that is embedded in intangibles implies that there are significant agglomeration economies in the production of intangibles (glaeser & gottlieb, ). one reason for this is that complex forms of knowledge are difficult to communicate over distance and require direct and repeated face-to-face contact for their exchange (storper & venables, ; d'este, guy, & iammarino, ) . for firms, co-locating with similar and related companies thus can boost collective learning processes through frequent opportunities for formal and informal knowledge exchanges. several recent studies provide strong evidence that the production of intangibles concentrates disproportionately in a few urban hotspots (crescenzi et al., ; moretti, ; balland et al., ) . a complementary feature is that lead firms have developed sophisticated strategies to allow teams of people in different global cities to collaborate in the production of intangibles. many lead firms nowadays deliberately establish linkages to other global knowledge hotspots to tap into pockets of complementary knowledge and resources that are unavailable or more expensive locally (bathelt, malmberg, & maskell, ) . they do so by setting up intrafirm linkages to competence-creating subsidiaries or by developing inter-firm partnerships (bathelt, cantwell, & mudambi, ) . once new knowledge combinations are created, these can then be transferred to the home country or other locations to enhance the parent firm's innovation performance (cano-kollmann et al., ) . regardless of the governance structure adopted, and the knowledge exchanges facilitated by ict, the mobility of key personnel is a key factor that keeps these ''pipelines'' open. several scholars have voiced their concern that the current covid- pandemic may have a lasting impact on globalization in general and more specifically on the ways in which mnes configure their cross-border activities (altman, ; irwin, ; kobrin, in this issue) . the combination of covid- -related confinement and protectionist measures is effectively a policy mix that affects mnes by ( ) increasing trade costs and ( ) amplifying the costs of communicating tacit knowledge (see figure ). the increase in trade costs reflects in part the struggle to adapt the international transportation system to the covid- -related policy measures. the unprecedented grounding of passenger planes has disrupted air transport since a significant portion of air cargo is transported in the hold of passenger planes (van assche, ). many ports' restrictions on vessels and crew changes have led to similar disruptions in sea freight (heiland & ulltveit-moe, ) . protectionist measures have added to these trade cost increases. with governments trying to limit the health and economic impact on their people, some countries have restricted their exports of hundreds of products, ranging from antibiotics to cotton face masks and medical ventilators (evenett, ) . the united states has reignited its trade war with china. japan has promised subsidies to japanese companies that are willing to reshore production from china to japan. the policy response to covid- has also amplified the costs of communicating tacit knowledge. locally, the physical distancing rules have severely limited both the planned and unplanned face-toface meetings that undergird the buzz of local innovation ecosystems. internationally, the closing of borders to non-essential travel and limits to immigration have limited firms' abilities to collaborate and exchange tacit knowledge with their foreign partners. the availability of digital infrastructure has allowed firms to limit the scope of disruptions related to the reduction in face-to-face interactions and may well have a permanent impact on global knowledge management practices in the post-pandemic period. for many office workers, telework and virtual conferencing have become the new norm. some companies such as twitter have even announced that staff can continue to work from home permanently. despite vast improvements in virtual conferencing capabilities, they nonetheless remain imperfect substitutes to face-to-face meetings. the effect of covid- on the development of intangibles will depend on both the duration of the health crisis and the extent to which the economy can return to normal once the pandemic itself is behind us. a relatively short crisis with a swift relaxing of physical distancing rules, an opening up of international borders and elimination of protectionist measures will likely lead to the return of established practices. a protracted public health pandemic, then again, that continues to limit social interactions in the medium term and potentially leads to a global descent into protectionism will require firms to reconfigure their business models on both the tangible and intangible side. in the special collection in this editorial we have highlighted just one topic area where international business scholarship can be instrumental in understanding the link between covid- and eventual economic recovery. the jibp special collection on covid- and international business policy includes several other original papers, including four that are published in this issue. we hope that these papers stimulate members of the ib community and beyond to engage in conversations about the ongoing policy challenges facing the global economy, and to place these issues on their research agenda alongside other ongoing sources of disruption such as climate change and rising inequality within and between countries. the collection opens with steve kobrin's thoughts on the impact of covid- on globalization. he argues that the pandemic has for the second time in little more than a decade laid bare the very real social, political and economic dangers of high specialization and connectedness between markets. after acting as a potent vehicle for the transmission of a global financial crisis during the great recession of - , the globalized system has during the covid- pandemic of acted as a virulent medium for the spread of a health calamity that continues to wreak havoc across the globe. according to kobrin, these events further undermine the longstanding belief that globalization is an indicator of progress and they have reinforced fears of ''the other'' that are all too easy to exploit for political gain. he points out three major changes that need to occur to restore a positive view of globalization: restoring the balance between sovereignty and integration; making globalization more inclusive; and insuring some degree of resilience in global supply chains. however, kobrin is skeptical that the current geopolitical climate is conducive to these changes. in a second paper, gary gereffi digs deeper into one of the ''choke points'' that have been uncovered by the covid- pandemic, namely the global shortages of medical supplies in the early months of the health crisis. he questions the oftenheard assertion that these shortages were due to structural flaws in medical equipment supply chains and conducts a detailed case study of the face mask value chain in the united states to evaluate this claim. according to gereffi, the shortage of masks in this case was much more a policy failure than a market failure. while just-intime production techniques could make supply chains fragile in times of crisis, they did not stop the american company m from quadrupling its u.s. supply of n masks from just over million in january to million per month in may. rather, the critical bottleneck appeared to be the limited government stockpiling of n masks before the crisis and the regulatory constraints that in early prevented m and its competitors from scaling up local production. in a third paper, rajneesh narula turns to the other side of these global value chains and focuses on the impact of the covid- pandemic on the informal economy in developing countries. according to narula, informal workers and enterprises have been especially vulnerable to the pandemicinduced economic shock. for decades, global value chains have used the informal sector in developing countries as a valve that takes on extra tasks during periods of peak demand. unfortunately, the reverse side of the coin is that informal workers and firms have also been the first to be cut from the roster when the valve is turned off during economic downturns. often living from hand to mouth, and with limited government rescue packages to help them, covid- has thus condemned millions of workers in the informal economy to poverty. narula nonetheless sees a (faint) silver lining: the severity of the economic shock and the precariousness of the informal sector may finally convince governments to actively engage with informal actors without pushing for their formalization, for example by placing them on par with formal firms when implementing industrial policy. in a fourth paper, peter buckley reflects on the impact of covid- for china's highly ambitious infrastructure-building belt road initiative (bri) that spans a large number of developing economies across asia. even before the current pandemic, there were concerns in several bri countries that the high costs of the investment projects were leading to unprecedented levels of debt. buckley points out that these apprehensions have only increased in the wake of the covid- pandemic as governments face severe revenue shortfalls, as they embrace new budgetary priorities in light of the health crisis, and as china faces growing geopolitical tensions with the united states. he nonetheless suggests that china's need to address its own domestic overcapacity combined with the amorphous nature of bri provides the chinese government with the means to flexibly rethink its bri strategy in the face of the covid- -related setbacks. this classification is similar to that presented by jones ( ) with the exception that the (policy-induced) collapse of international trade in the interwar years is not considered separately. internationalization in the information age: a new era for places, firms, and international business networks will covid- have a lasting impact on globalization the great convergence the supply side matters: guns versus butter, covid-style complex economic activities concentrate in large cities clusters and knowledge: local buzz, global pipelines and the process of knowledge creation overcoming frictions in transnational knowledge flows: challenges of connecting, sense-making and integrating covid- could bring down the trading system trump's assault on the global trading system: and why decoupling from china will change everything the governance of the global factory: location and control of world economic activity knowledge connectivity: an agenda for innovation research in international business technological innovation and multinational corporations will covid- change how we think about migration and migrant workers? the geography of innovation: local hotspots and global innovation networks shaping the formation of university-industry research collaborations: what type of proximity does really matter economic policy responses to a pandemic: developing the covid- economic stimulus index protectionism, state discrimination, and international business since the onset of the global financial crisis sicken thy neighbour: the initial trade policy response to covid- how big business is joining the fight against covid- the wealth of cities: agglomeration economies and spatial equilibrium in the united states an unintended crisis: covid- restrictions hit sea transportation the pandemic adds momentum to the deglobalization trend the greater trade collapse of : learnings from the - great trade collapse multinationals and global capitalism: from the nineteenth to the twenty first century how covid- is transforming the world economy how globalization became a thing that goes bump into the night knowledge of the firm and the evolutionary theory of the multinational corporation intangibles: management, measurement, and reporting international connectedness and local disconnectedness: mne strategy, city-regions and disruption from the editor: engaging international business scholars with public policy issues the effect of high-tech clusters on the productivity of top inventors populism and the economics of globalization covid- could spur automation and reverse globalisation -to some extent buzz: face-to-face contact and the urban economy from commodity chains to value chains: interdisciplinary theory building in an age of globalization business models and dynamic capabilities from the editor: steering a policy turn in international business-opportunities and challenges trade is among the casualties in the covid- pandemic the future of international business research on corporate globalization that never was… ari van assche is professor of international business at hec montréal and deputy editor of the journal of international business policy. his research focuses on the organization of global value chains and their implications for international trade sarianna lundan holds the chair in international management and governance at the university of bremen and she is the editor-in-chief of the journal of international business policy key: cord- - kkqqgop authors: wagner, peter title: knowing how to act well in time date: - - journal: j bioeth inq doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kkqqgop numerous scholars in the social sciences and humanities have speedily analysed and interpreted the covid- -induced social and political crisis. while the commitment to address an urgent topic is to be appreciated, this article suggests that the combination of confidence in the applicability of one’s tools and belief in the certainty of the available knowledge can be counter-productive in the face of a phenomenon that in significant respects is unprecedented. starting out from the plurality of forms of knowledge that are mobilized to analyse covid- and its consequences as well as the lack of any clearly hegemonic knowledge, the article tries to understand how a limited convergence in the politico-medical responses to the crisis emerged, and speculates on what would have happened if this had not been the case. in conclusion, it is argued that this pandemic demands a greater awareness of the uncertainty of our knowledge and of the consequences of our actions, both in terms of being situated in time and of aiming at timeliness. abstract numerous scholars in the social sciences and humanities have speedily analysed and interpreted the covid- -induced social and political crisis. while the commitment to address an urgent topic is to be appreciated, this article suggests that the combination of confidence in the applicability of one's tools and belief in the certainty of the available knowledge can be counterproductive in the face of a phenomenon that in significant respects is unprecedented. starting out from the plurality of forms of knowledge that are mobilized to analyse covid- and its consequences as well as the lack of any clearly hegemonic knowledge, the article tries to understand how a limited convergence in the politico-medical responses to the crisis emerged, and speculates on what would have happened if this had not been the case. in conclusion, it is argued that this pandemic demands a greater awareness of the uncertainty of our knowledge and of the consequences of our actions, both in terms of being situated in time and of aiming at timeliness. keywords action . covid- . democracy . knowledge . pandemic . technocracy . time . uncertainty there is no shortage of analyses and interpretations of the crisis that the covid- has inflicted on humankind and of its consequences. as it seems, many of my colleagues in the social sciences and humanities only had to take out their toolkit and put it to use on this new phenomenon. at times, one could even have the impression that they were waiting for something like this to happen for them to rush to go public with their analyses and proposals. characteristically, the interpretations of the crisis come in two forms. the optimists hold that humankind will grow through this experience. the world after covid- will show more solidarity, moral commitment, and concern for the common good. the era of unrestrained profit-making, boundless pleasure-seeking, and selfish pursuit of one's goals without concern for others will come to an end. these observers call for action to grasp the unique occasion for creating a better world, unique because, for once, the world is already moving in that direction. in turn, the critics observe a crisis-driven move to authoritarianism, to new nationalism and restrictions to movement, to technocracy with political decisions based on expertise rather than deliberation, in short, the return to disciplinary society combined with isolation of individuals and loss of sociality. the short era of liberal democracy and convivial civil society during which the power of dominating groups could effectively be limited will come to an end. these observers call, if they do, for resistance, and their view is marked by suspicion and denunciation of the politicians and their advisors whom we see and hear every day now. faced with this avalanche of striking analyses, i have asked myself: why do i not have anything to contribute to this debate? it's not that i lack the impetus. like many others, i have the impression to experience a sociopolitical event of possibly greater significance than any other during my lifetime. and as someone who studies society, history, and politics, i feel i should have something to say on this event. and if so, i should say so loudly, to be heard. so, why don't i? helped by the postponement of other commitments due to the lockdown, at the time of writing (mid-april ) already in its fifth week in spain where i live, i collect as widely as possible information on the ongoing events but also on their background and their conditions. thus, despite not having specific medical expertise, i do not feel that i know too little-too little in the sense of knowing so much less than others that i should keep my mouth shut. rather, i feel that we all know too littletoo little to be certain to act well, as far as the politicians and medical advisors are concerned, and too little to understand well what the appropriate action is, as concerns all others, for most of us. this lack may be exactly that which is most characteristic of the current situation. covid- emerged at a moment when, despite evident and accumulating signs to the contrary, the view was still widespread that we have all the knowledge we need and all the required understanding for necessary action; that things are basically under control or can at least be brought under control; and that this control emerges as the aggregate outcome of uncoordinated action rather than through communication and coordination among those affected and involved. this is a view that our current "modernity" is largely built on. covid- shakes the building and imposes a reflection on our assumptions about knowledge, action, and time. what follows is a small step in that direction. epidemiology and virology, so i learnt quickly, were expecting something like this to happen. they have accumulated knowledge of considerable quality and coherence, dating back at least to the influenza pandemic of - (still known as the spanish flu; a century ago, such an inadequate naming could still be made to stick) and building up in concise terms with hiv, sars, h n , ebola, and mers across the past few decades. the problem, though, is that every virus is specific and the behavioural properties of this one were unknown and are still not sufficiently known. they can be understood only through observation, after it already emerged. while comparing covid- with its predecessors could usefully guide research, drawing conclusions from quickly made comparisons could easily mislead-or delay-remedial action. in the next step, the gradually increasing knowledge about the virus is confronted with two other kinds of knowledge. on the one side, techniques of mathematical modelling have considerably developed in recent time. they are at the forefront of attempts at trying to understand uncertain futures. they have a prominent place in the deliberations of the international panel on climate change (ipcc), and for good reason, since without them little would be understood at all. but public debate-and already preceding it, public science communication-tends to forget about the degree of uncertainty. with regard to climate change, a reasonable maxim for action can rather easily be devised: it is better to err on the side of prudence. with regard to covid- , conclusions are less straightforward. among other institutions, the institute for health metrics and evaluation (ihme) at the university of washington has become widely known for its predictions of covid- infections and deaths in the united states and elsewhere. reasonably, the researchers steadily update their findings-and their modelling-by introducing new data. as a consequence, though, their predictions are corrected day by day, and they change by considerable margins. rather than orienting public debate and action, their effect is disorientation. it might be advisable to refrain from publishing these figures-even though this would less be a call on the researchers, who will wish to enhance timely scholarly collaboration, rather than on the media, which at the very least could underline the extremely fragile nature of this knowledge. on the other side, neither the virus nor mathematics know anything about institutions. but the number of medical doctors, nurses, intensive care units, personal protection equipment, and their distribution and availability across space and time is crucial for the development of the pandemic and for the chances of slowing it down or stopping it. this is knowledge that public health research can provide, but the recommendations that follow from it may be quite different from those that would be arrived at when relying only on epidemiology, virology, and mathematical modelling. there is evidence that such a knowledge clash occurred over covid- , more pronounced in the early weeks of the pandemic, and in some countries, in particular in the united kingdom and sweden, with more consequences than in others. governments all across the planet claim that their covid- policies are "science-based." heads of government and ministers of health appear always accompanied by leading medical experts in their press conferences. some observers have seen this as a sign of an emerging new technocracy, with expertise overriding democratic deliberation. given the multiple kinds of knowledge, however, this seems far from the case. let us look at two earlier political uses of scientific expertise in comparison. after the second world war, the slogan about the "civilian use of nuclear energy" promised a radiant future based on an endless supply of cheap energy and, consequently, infinite growth of the wealth of all nations with guaranteed satisfaction of every material need. science seemed truly to have become the "endless frontier." it took considerable time and effort to change public debate by underlining not only the danger of operating nuclear power stations but also the hubris of claiming to control nuclear waste sites over millennia to come. this was gradually achieved by the late s, and the transformation of the debate was not least due to the elaboration of counter-expertise of such a scholarly quality that it could no longer be easily rejected or ignored. at about the same time, the late s, a shift in hegemony occurred within the economic sciences. as keynesian demand management seemed to have failed to effectively respond to the economic problems of the early s, a return to more conventional versions of neo-classical economics happened, which in policy terms demanded the reduction of public debt, of labour cost, and of taxation of profits, supposedly to unleash again the beneficial workings of markets. the new policies clearly benefitted certain business interests and worked against the less well-off in society. in this light, it remains a bit of an enigma why also centre-left (social democrat) politicians complied with this new doctrine, but what we may call epistemic domination certainly played a role: the economic sciences claimed to have understood why earlier policies failed and, based on these insights, arrived at an apparently clear view of the unalterable laws of market economies. in this case, there was a preceding "counter-expertise," but it was discredited by having failed to avert crises. in both of these cases, therefore, there was a monopoly or hegemony of expertise, and the recommendations following from such expertise served powerful interests in society, served (parts of) the dominating groups, as one used to say. the critical theories of technocracy, as they were elaborated during the s and s, were based on observations of such a situation. but none of this is characteristic of the present moment, for at least two reasons. first, whatever there is in terms of hegemonic expertise is of a different nature. one may say that, after all, most governments follow the guidelines for dealing with pandemics that had been elaborated by the world health organisation (who) and the respective national institutes of health. but in contrast to the physics of nuclear energy and the claims of neo-classical economics, the knowledge of a pandemic requires detailed and nuanced empirical observation of the specificities of the situation. as said above, this kind of knowledge only becameand still becomes-gradually available. furthermore, this knowledge is then liable to somewhat different interpretations by epidemiology, virology, modelling, and public health. at the moment of writing, one can say that there has been a considerable, even though in some settings slow, process of convergence of knowledge-based policy recommendations over the first few months of the pandemic. this convergence may even be understood, optimistically, as an indicator of solidarity across borders, or some understanding of a common problem and the need to act in common. but such convergence is not yet assured for the further course of the pandemic and the measures for "deescalation." this is so because, second, the already plural set of bio-medical expertise, broadly understood, meets countervailing expertise from the social sciences-economics, sociology, political science, psychology-as soon as policy decisions need to be taken. this is not to say that truly scholarly knowledge from these disciplines was present at the beginning, not at all. but politicians have a kind of "practical expertise" in these matters. they have a sense of their dependence on the mood in circles of society: business circles, the media, social movements, and others, varying with the political parties. this "knowledge" tells them what they can do and not do. from this observation, two questions arise, one asking about the decisions regarding the past two months and one asking about the decisions to be taken during the next, say, half a year. the striking answer to the first question is that politicians have done what they knew could not be done, namely ordering what is now called a "lockdown" of economy and society. the two societies that have long (though in recent years much less) been seen as the standard-bearers of liberalism, the united kingdom and the united states, toyed for some time with taking another route, led by governments that incarnate the doubt about institutional collective action that has become more widespread across the past three decades in general (more surprisingly, and probably for somewhat different reasons, sweden did so as well). this initial divergence permits us to speculate about what would have happened if this laissez aller had become the dominant attitude. clearly, many more people would have died, and at some point "herd immunity" would possibly have been reached-from all we know now: very little and after many victims. the pandemic would have been described as a natural catastrophe, like a giant earthquake or a tsunami. the governments would have regretted the "human losses" but argued that there was nothing that could be done about them-or at least nothing that could reasonably be done, given that different concerns had to be balanced. such an attitude was not as widely off the mark as it seems in the current moment, since concerns about restrictions of civil liberties and human rights have been and keep being voiced in many countries. we will know better only much later, but it is possible that only the emerging concise view of the who at the core of a well-networked global epistemic community in health studies prevented this option from being pursued and forced initially deviating governments to fall in line. carrying the speculation one step further, it is likely that we would talk very differently about covid- if that road had been taken. the pandemic would have been placed in the line, sketched above, that leads from the "spanish flu" to more recent spreads of viruses and just be compared in quantitative terms: number of infections and deaths, spatial diffusion, time until development of a vaccine or a treatment. there would have been some debate about social consequences, such as the sudden loss of the older generation, comparable with the debate about hiv/aids and changes in sexual behaviour. this would have been a "crisis," to be sure, but one that would have been cognitively domesticated by analysing it as something that had already happened before, only in describably different form. if so, then it is the extended "lockdown" that marks the difference, because of the sudden and radical halt to most economic, social, and cultural activities. it is the reason why we talk about covid- as potentially leading to a radical social transformation in a way in which we did not do about any of the other diseases mentioned above, except in some limited respects for hiv/aids. this halt, though, is nothing like an earthquake or a tsunami. it has been decided by governments and implemented by public administration, even supported by the deployment of the states' monopoly of legitimate violence. at times, the current situation is compared to a war. but recent experience of extended warfare, in particular the two world wars of the twentieth century, meant the total mobilization of society for the purpose of winning the war. currently, some segments of society are extremely highly mobilized, most importantly health workers, but most of society has been forced into de-mobilization. this is what is unprecedented and appears to us as a harbinger of radical change. since the financial crisis of , critical political sociology has re-focused its attention on the relation between capitalism and democracy. one influential interpretation holds that governments today have to address two constituencies: the people in the traditional sense of the citizenry, expressing itself through elections and opinion polls, on the one hand, and on the other hand, the global markets, granting or withdrawing credibility and, as an immediate consequence, resources to indebted states (e.g., streeck ) . when there is tension between the interests of the constituencies, so the argument goes, the market constituency tends to prevail. currently, though, governments appear to act against the interests of both of these constituencies: they have wiped out the profit-making opportunities of big business and the earnings of small business and selfemployed workers; they have forced workers into unemployment, most drastically those in informal work situations; they have closed down the consumption and leisure activities that were considered sacrosanct because they kept people content (for an early attempt of analysing the dynamics of financial-crisis management, see tooze ). pre-covid- political sociology is at a loss to explain such government action. at first sight, one plausible way to close the explanatory gap is to underline that these measures are temporary, that they are taken in an emergency, that everything will return to "normal" once the emergency is over. but this leads us to the second question, the one about the decisions that will be taken in the near future. in parallel to the mathematical modelling of the course of the pandemic, economic modellers shoot figures about the expected decline in economic growth and its duration. however, in this situation even more than before, rather than being based on sound knowledge and technique, these predictions are best seen as attempts to imagine futures in the hope that the imagination will guide action in such a way as to make the future less uncertain than it actually is (beckert ) . it cannot be ruled out that, some time from now, something like a return to "normality" will occur. the adjustments of institutions and practices may turn out to be small compared to some of the expectation and imagination that the current exceptionality has generated. at the current moment, however, uncertainty and lack of knowledge prevail. and it is under this angle that the entire crisis is most fruitfully analysed. in many countries, governments have recently been criticized for having reacted late and insufficiently to the emergence of covid- . while such criticism is more valid in some cases than others (and what follows should not be read as exempting everyone from responsibility), it is very often based on a problematic use of temporality. it is argued that some piece of information had been available early but that the action that was the adequate response to the information was taken with a considerable delay. it is overlooked that it was only with hindsight that the information was seen as requiring a certain action, not at the moment it first emerged. the criticism assumes, on the one hand, a timeless certainty of knowledge. by implication, it also assumes a fundamental stability of the world, in which an occurrence in the present can only be a repetition, with at best minor and insignificant alteration, of an occurrence in the past. and on the other hand, it assumes an unquestioned hierarchy in the application of knowledge, namely to be effected by the state. in other words, the criticism operates with a kind of vulgar platonism, a timehonoured desire of human beings to have everything known and under control. the first assumption holds that the knowledge required for action is in principle available; and that actors who do not avail themselves of the required knowledge are at fault. but this is in denial of exactly that which many of us experience, namely the occurrence of something unprecedented, and thus the lack of actionadequate knowledge. in the light of uncertain knowledge, and furthermore of a knowledge base that was only evolving over time, politicians have hesitatedproblematically so but also understandably. for purposes of action, the novelty does not have to be absolute to be problematic. virologists are unlikely to see covid- as radically different from all other viruses, and even sociologists do not need to abandon all of the concepts they developed for social transformations. we only need to be ready to accept that the novelty of the current situation is such that the knowledge-at-hand is insufficient to adequately understand it; that this situation is not one that can be easily subsumed under the concepts we are used to employ. therefore, it is more important at the moment to observe closely, to try to describe, to look for possible comparisons, probably not any single one that explains everything, but many partial comparisons. and this requires time. but if our scholarly knowledge is not sufficient for fully and immediately understanding the covid- induced situation we are in, we also have to accept that the situation is similar for those who have responsibility to act. it is, furthermore, made much more difficult by the fact that the adequacy of an action often depends on whether it was made in time. the question of adequacy in time leads to the second assumption, the one of state capacity. in this regard, the virus encountered our societies on the wrong foot. the idea that the aggregate of uncoordinated individual actions would on its own bring about desirable outcomes has been ever more widely accepted for decades, in as different areas as unregulated market exchange, the "non-governmental" workings of "civil society," and the clip-form of communicative exchange in global social networks. in some such cases, like a stock exchange movement, a crowd-funding initiative, or a social-network clip "going viral," this kind of "collective" action can today be extremely fast, can take the form of a "social avalanche" (borch ) . with more such phenomena, though, the doubts about the presupposed desirability of the outcomes also increase. in contrast to those phenomena, co-ordinated collective action, based on problem-oriented communication and sedimented in purpose-guided institutions, has been systematically discredited for over three decades. many of its sites have been weakened and dismantled, in some cases as concretely as in the authority and resource endowment of public-health institutions. such institutions were supposed to be slow both in receiving new information and knowledge and in acting efficiently on the basis of such information. ironically, such recent criticism of bureaucratic states mirrors the timehonoured objections to pluralistic democratic deliberation, supposed to be incapable to confront any urgencies. however, we have no reason to believe that action based on multiple advice and plural deliberation is necessarily slower than either so-called "self-regulation" or hierarchic technocratic action (flaig ) . there is no reason at all to glorify currently leading politicians. most often, their reasons for acting tend to be considerably less than noble: getting re-elected; not offending their main allies in society; having something plausible to communicate in the short term. they are not necessarily oriented towards, as their "vocation" (weber (weber [ ) should be, the common good or the benefit of society at large. but watching them these days, we see that they do not even know how to pursue their lessthan-noble objectives: their re-election prospects are highly uncertain; they have acted against the immediate interests of their clientele; they are at a loss of communicating anything very convincing. as said above, they all claim that what they do is "science-based," but they say so merely to provide a justification that they would otherwise lack. there is hardly an indication of a rising technocracy and/or of a new form of authoritarian control. suddenly, critics expect this systematically disabled state to get everything right, and immediately. what we observe, though, is rather the evidence of lack of control and even of the illusion of control that politicians are used to advertise because it comes with their office. today, politicians are weak in the face of both, the pandemic and the criticism of how they are handling it. clearly, they do not have the tools at hand that they would have had before austerity politics and the discrediting of collective institutional action. and having lost those (or rather: thrown them away), they also now face human and civil rights-based criticism for wanting to increase the monitoring of behaviour; business criticism for destroying a functioning economy; social criticism for disregarding the fate of those who are less well off; and more. rather than orienting our social-science analyses towards sorting out which criticism is most justified, and to determine "whose side we're on," it seems to me we should grant to those responsible for action that they encounter the same uncertainty as everyone else in the face of a situation that in crucial respects is unprecedented. the difference between "them," the politicians, and "us," the scholars, but also between politicians in office and those in opposition, is that that the former need to act in time-and with regard to covid- indeed with considerable urgency. social scientists, most of the time, are exempted from that obligation. as social scientists, though, their obligation would be to elaborate a knowledge of society, economy, and politics that takes uncertainty and temporality better into account to understand the conditions for action in time. such knowledge will always be difficult to achieve but we can at least briefly spell out what, for want of better terms, can be called an ontological attitude and a methodological maxim. with regard to the former, one should abandon the notion that social phenomena repeat themselves. this is not even true of viruses, as covid- in relation to other coronaviruses shows, and much less so for social phenomena. rather than looking for regularity and equilibria, as much social science does, it is often more useful to focus on moments of imbalance, asymmetry, dispute, which is when more of the social world and its dynamics reveals itself (see, e.g., boltanski ) . this attitude has consequences for the pursuit of two of the most common activities of the social sciences, namely trying to derive the present from the past and predicting the future. as to the latter, as mentioned above, a key technique is mathematical modelling, developing with great speed and considerable variety. its practitioners are mostly well aware of the uncertainty they are dealing with. but they rarely convey this in public and, at least as importantly, they try to reduce uncertainty mostly by feeding in more data and improving technique. thus, remedial action with regard to past errors is again done by forward-looking. more effort may need to be devoted to review past modelling exercises and the way their-social, not just mathematicalstatistical-assumptions may have created or exacerbated erroneous predictions. the future is not merely an extrapolation of the present, as the present is not an extrapolation of the past. but in contrast to the future, the past has for us the advantage that something about it is known with some degree of certainty, notwithstanding all ongoing dispute in the theory and philosophy of history. we have to learn to relate to the past in such a way as to grasp the possibly common conditions for action without limiting our current possibilities to the existing range of past outcomes. with a specific issue in mind, such as covid- today, the first question concerns the identification of a comparable situation. this is neither the plague, because the social configuration was very different, nor sars, because the behaviour of the virus was very different. my intuition is that a covid- oriented historical-comparative sociology could fruitfully look at the first world war and the - pandemic. a century ago, societies were not so different from present ones that an attempt at comparison would find too little to hold on to. this is the minimum condition for a fruitful comparison. furthermore, those societies had undergone a major social transformation in the decades before , one that today is sometimes called a first globalization. the dynamics of this transformation led towards catastrophe; and when the virus emerged, the catastrophe of the first world war had already happened. today, covid- may have emerged just in time for us to avert catastrophe-a future catastrophe that does not yet have a name but several candidates of which climate change is arguably the front-runner. my apologies for having turned a conclusion into a new opening. my excuse is that maybe this is just what we need to do. imagined futures: fictional expectations and capitalist dynamics social avalanche: crowds, cities, and financial markets l'amour et la justice comme compétence to act with good advice: greek tragedy and the democratic public sphere. in the greek polis and the invention of democracy: a politico-cultural transformation and its interpretations buying time: the delayed crisis of democratic capitalism how coronavirus almost brought down the global financial system. the guardian publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. key: cord- -wnbqqzot authors: hamza, marwa s.; badary, osama a.; elmazar, mohamed m. title: cross-sectional study on awareness and knowledge of covid- among senior pharmacy students date: - - journal: j community health doi: . /s - - -z sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wnbqqzot extraordinary actions have been implemented in an effort to control the rapid spread of the ongoing covid- epidemic in egypt. people’s adherence to control measures is influenced by their knowledge, attitudes and practices towards the disease. therefore, in the present study we assessed pharmacy senior students’ knowledge, attitudes and practices towards the covid- pandemic. an online questionnaire was created and it consisted of questions testing their knowledge about covid- clinical characteristics, transmission routes and prevention and control steps. among senior pharmacy students (n = ), % were females and % were living in greater cairo. their main source of information included social media ( %), published articles ( %) and television ( %). the overall correct knowledge score was %. most of the students displayed a good covid- knowledge level ( . % of the students). the students were least informed when trying to answer questions about hyper-coagulation, as a major cause for death in patients with severe covid- , and about the timings on the necessity to wear masks. assessment of students’ attitudes and practices towards covid- reflected that % of them were confident that health care teams and scientists could win the fight against the virus. in addition, % of students agreed that covid- will be controlled successfully. the greater the students’ knowledge, the more confident they felt that covid- will be controlled successfully (or . , % confidence interval [ci] . – . ). good behavioral practice towards covid- control was confirmed when % of students answered that they didn’t go out to any crowded place. females were . times ( % confidence interval [ci] . – . ) more likely to avoid going out than males. bad behavioral practice became evident when approximately % of students admitted that they did not wear masks when they left their house. therefore, more efforts should be taken to protect future pharmacists from this pandemic. an epidemic, triggered by the new coronavirus sars-cov- , has recently become the focus of the scientific community attention [ ] . covid- represents the illness generated by this virus. its clinical presentation ranges from being an asymptomatic infection to developing into a severe disease with high mortality rate [ ] . at the time of writing (may , ), over , , covid- cases and , death have been registered worldwide [ ] . in particular, in egypt, there are , positive individuals and death cases [ ] . now, covid- has been classified as a pandemic by the world health organization. it is both a highly contagious and a life-threatening disease [ ] . its reproduction ratio (rr) is defined as the expected number of cases generated by a single infected individual within a susceptible population [ ] . it varies between . and . [ ] . these values are high compared to influenza (rr = . - . ) [ ] . currently, a fight is being undertaken against the covid- pandemic. adherence to control and prevention steps is paramount for ensuring a complete success over covid- . lessons were learned from the sars outbreak. these indicate that fear exists within the population awareness and attitude to infectious diseases. this factor may hinder further efforts to prevent the virus spread. therefore, it is crucial to understand covid- public's awareness at this critical stage to facilitate pandemic management [ , ] . as members of the health care team, pharmacists play an essential role in patient care. this includes contributing to the decision-making process within the multidisciplinary health care team, taking responsibility for medication administration and assessment of patient care [ ] . moreover, together with physicians, pharmacists' knowledge, attitude and practices are crucial to prevent and control the disease [ ] . health care teams include pharmacists are responsible for providing knowledge, delivering good quality management and protecting individuals from illness during epidemic prevalence period. therefore, pharmacy students' education should include training in precautionary measures, effective treatment and follow-up. this is critical together with their behavior in these fields [ ] . normally, training in disaster medicine occupy a very small place in regular medical curricula worldwide [ ] . therefore, the present study was carried out to evaluate knowledge about covid- as an attempt to identify senior students' degree of awareness and its effects. furthermore, this study objective aims to contribute in developing a fit for purpose education program that creates awareness among future practitioners. to the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first study directly exploring senior pharmacy students' knowledge, attitudes and practice regarding this topic. this is an institutional based cross sectional study conducted in faculty of pharmacy at the british university in egypt during the period from april , to april , . the targeted population included students who had completed ≥ % of the credit-hours required for graduation. the sample size was calculated by using the online sample size calculator raosoft®. based on an estimated population of students in the final years (year and ) and on the anticipated response of %, the minimum required sample size was participants with a confidence level of % and a % margin of error. a pre-validated questionnaire [ ] was modified after a comprehensive literature search and based on the most recent available information from the world health organization, the center for disease control and prevention (usa) and the egypt ministry of health. the initial draft was sent to a group of experts, chosen according to their experience and expertise in related fields, to appraise the questions in terms of relativity, simplicity and importance. then, the questionnaire was sent by email, through survey monkey software®. a pilot study was conducted on subjects, to test the questionnaire validity. following a group discussion, the questionnaire was completed. the data from the pilot study was removed from the final analysis. the questionnaire included two sections: demographics, and knowledge, attitudes and practices questions (kap). demographic variables included age, gender and place of current residence (cairo, other governorates in egypt). the first part of the kap represented the knowledge investigation, consisting of questions ( fig. ): questions were about covid- clinical presentations (k -k ), asked about transmission routes (k -k ), and the following questions quizzed on prevention and control (k -k ). these questions were answered on a true/false basis, including an additional "i don't know" option. one point was assigned to a correct response, while no points were given for an incorrect/unknown answer. the total score ranged from to , with a higher score suggesting better covid- awareness. in the pilot sample, the knowledge questionnaire cronbach's alpha coefficient was . , indicating reasonable internal consistency [ ] . attitudes towards covid- were appraised with questions (a -a , fig. ) that asked about the level of agreement on the covid- control implementations and the confidence perception for winning the war against this coronavirus. the assessment of students practices was performed through questions (p -p , fig. ), that investigated their actions towards going to a crowded place, wearing masks when going out in recent days, maintaining social distance between others and if they agree that patients should disclose their exposure to covid- . finally, one last question was added to inquire about the students' source of covid- information. before study start-up, permission was taken from the ethics committee of the faculty of pharmacy at the british university in egypt. the participants were briefed about the study rationale and were reassured about the confidentiality safeguards for their personal information and responses. the answered survey submission was considered as consent for study participation. respondents' participation was completely consensual, anonymous and voluntary. the completed questionnaires data were analyzed using the statistical package for social science, version . (spss . , chicago, il). the significance level was set at a value of p < . for all analyses. initially, all information gathered through the questionnaire was coded into variables. in the pilot study, the cronbach's alpha coefficient test was used to measure internal consistency. data normality was tested using the kolmogorov-smirnov test. descriptive and inferential statistics, involving chi-square test, mann-whitney u test, correlation and logistic regression, were used to analyze the results. fever, tiredness, and dry cough, k some patients infected with the covid- virus may suffer from aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea, k . coagulation dysfunction is one of the major causes for death in patients with severe covid- , k . older persons and persons with pre-existing medical conditions (such as high blood pressure, heart disease, lung disease, cancer or diabetes) appear to develop serious illness with covid- more often than others, k. people with covid- will not transmit the virus to others when fever is not present, k . covid- can spread from person to person through small droplets from the nose or mouth which are spread when a person with covid- coughs or exhales, k . only wear a mask if you are ill with covid- symptoms or looking after someone who may have covid- , k . it is not necessary for children and young adults to take measures to prevent the infection by the covid- virus, k . to prevent the infection by covid- , individuals should avoid going to crowded places such as public transportation, k . covid- is caused by a virus, so antibiotics do not work. antibiotics should not be used as a means of prevention or treatment of covid- . they should only be used as directed by a physician to treat a bacterial infection, k . isolating and treating people with covid- infections are effective means of minimizing viral spread, k . people who have contact with someone who has covid- infection should be isolated in a proper place immediately. the observation period is usually days in the present study, the scoring system and categorization were utilized to assess knowledge levels towards the covid- pandemic. the questions determination was based on one point for every correct answer and zero points for false answers. by adding the results of all the knowledge questions in the survey, the participants mean knowledge scores (kss) were determined. ks ranged from to , with the higher scores demonstrating an increased level of pandemic covid- knowledge. knowledge level categories were defined by an % cut-off point as any score above % is good and any score below % is poor [ ] . during the course of this study, a total of participants completed the devised online survey questions. after excluding respondents who participated in the pilot study, the final sample consisted of participant students. among these, the average age (measured in years) was ± , students ( %) were females. when identifying the place of residence, students ( %) were living in greater cairo while ( %) resided in other governorates (table ) . with regards to the students' source of information, results disclosed that the main source of information was social media ( %) followed by published articles ( %) and television ( %). in the present study, the main objective was to measure covid- related knowledge of pharmacy senior students. the mean score of covid- related knowledge was % ( ± . , ranging from to ) (table ). in particular, . % of the students possessed a good knowledge level, while . % displayed poor knowledge based on an % cut-off point [ ] . the first survey questions (k -k ) measured students' knowledge towards covid- clinical presentations. the highest correct answer rate ( %) related to the covid- related knowledge items identified by questions; 'the main clinical symptoms of covid- are fever, tiredness, and dry cough (true)' and 'older persons and persons with pre-existing medical conditions (such as high blood pressure, heart disease, lung disease, cancer or diabetes) appear to develop serious illness with covid- more often than others (true)' (fig. ) . however, the item with the lowest correct-answer rates was: 'coagulation dysfunction is one of the major causes for death in patients with severe covid- (true)' ( %) (fig. ). the answer 'i don't know' was selected by % of students for the question 'covid- may cause aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea in some patients' (fig. ) . then the following questions (k -k ) measured students' knowledge towards the transmission routes. in this case, the percentage of knowledgeable students is high. k. : no transmission if fever is not present ( %); k : covid- can spread from person to person through small droplets ( %); and k : wear a mask only if you are ill or looking after someone who may have covid- ( %). a similar result was achieved with the next questions (k -k ), which concerned assessing knowledge about covid- prevention and control (fig. ) . this study showed a significant relation between the knowledge score and published articles as source of information (p < . ). the students' attitude was measured with questions. the highest positive result was attained by the following covid- -related attitude item: 'are you confident that the health care team and scientists can win the fight against the covid- virus?' ( % answered yes). however, the lowest positive attitude result corresponded to the following: 'do you agree that covid- will be successfully controlled?' (only % answered yes) (fig. ) . the highest performance rate was attained by the following covid- -related practice item: 'in recent days, have you gone to any crowded place?' ( % answered no). however, the item with the lowest performance rate was: 'in recent days, if you left your house, have you worn a mask when leaving home?' ( . % gave a negative answer) (fig. ) . as expected, it was found that the covid- practice for going out in crowded place was significantly different between males and females: females displayed a lower tendency to go out than males (p < . ). in addition, the practice for keeping social distance between students was significantly different between males and females: females maintained social distance more successfully than males (p < . ). it is worth mentioning that significant relations existed between the two practices and the students' source of information. in particular, the practice of wearing a mask when leaving home was directly correlated with using television as source of information (p < . ). furthermore, the practice of keeping social distance of at least m from other people was directly associated with utilizing physicians' advice as source of information (p < . ). moreover, the correlation coefficient, existing between the major knowledge, attitude and practice variables was analyzed. a weak positive correlation was observed between attitude and practice and this result appeared to be highly significant (r = . ; p < . ). however, no correlation appeared to exist between knowledge and attitudes or knowledge and practice (table ) . logistic regression analyses showed that students with a good knowledge score are . times more optimistic and agreed that covid- will be successfully controlled ( % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). students who live in cairo were . times more likely to maintain social distance of at least m from other people ( % confidence interval [ci] . - . )., and . times more likely to agree that patients should disclose potential covid- exposure, than students who live in other governorates in egypt ( % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). moreover, female students were . times more likely to avoid going to any crowded place than male students ( % confidence interval [ci] . - . ), and . times more likely to keep their social distance of at least m from other people than male students ( % confidence interval [ci] . - . ) ( table ). the coronavirus disease (covid- ) is an emerging contagious respiratory disease caused by a novel coronavirus. it was first detected in december in wuhan, china [ ] . emerging infectious diseases like covid- can occur anywhere in the world. by being part of the health care team, pharmacists can be exposed to the risk of infection [ ] . here, we present the results of a questionnaire study about the knowledge, attitudes and practices of egyptian senior pharmacy students towards the covd- disease. in the present study, one of the most significant findings was that the highest main source of covid- information among senior students was social media, television and published articles. the results strongly support similar findings in which the main source of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) information was reported to be the internet and social media [ ] . this clearly indicates that senior pharmacy students are relying consistently on the internet, social media and online information as the principal ways to obtain information, compared with friends and other resources. the egyptian ministry of health and population and the world health organization (who) have provided clusters with covid- information through their websites and are recommending everyone to be aware of updates relating to knowledge about covid- [ , ] . similarly, a previous study reported that internet was the main source of information about mers-cov [ ] . therefore, it is feasible to suggest that researches should urgently find ways to utilize the internet to promote health, especially in emerging infectious diseases and pandemics. at present, the quality of the information available on the internet is insufficient and needs to be revised. furthermore, a very small percentage of participants reported that healthcare professionals, either physicians or pharmacists, were their primary source of information. this scenario illustrates the lack of healthcare team engagement in increasing the public awareness regarding different aspects of covid- . the present study showed a significant relation existing between the knowledge score and published articles as source of information (p < . ). that may be due to the role played by the who and the egyptian ministry of health and population in providing cluster with covid- information through their websites. therefore, these organizations recommend everyone to be aware of updates about covid- . as mentioned earlier, senior pharmacy students participated in the present study. the overall mean knowledge scored among students was % ( ± . ). most of the students possessed a good covid- knowledge level ( . % of the students), possibly owing to the fact that the egyptian ministry of health and population (mohp) and the world health organization (who) are providing a significant amount of covid- information through their websites [ , ] . the present study results showed that % of participants were knowledgeable about the main clinical symptoms of covid- . in addition, the same percentage of students knew that older persons and persons with preexisting medical conditions were more liable to develop serious illness with covid- than others. these findings confirm observations from previous studies, which reported that the majority of participants believed that the disease is more dangerous for the elderly and for those suffering from chronic diseases [ , ] . the students were least knowledgeable towards the question of coagulation dysfunction being one of the major death causes in patients with severe covid- . suitable remedial actions should be taken since vascular, venous thromboembolism and arterial thrombosis risks have been documented in severe and critically ill covid- patients [ , ] . a perceived lack of information regarding some of the covid- clinical presentation or preventive measures highlights the requirement for the inclusion of more training, seminars in their courses. this raises concerns regarding the ability of newly-graduated pharmacists to deal with the covid- pandemic disease, or any other potential similar epidemic events. also, the students were least knowledgeable about when to wear masks. masks and sanitizing products use has evolved since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, resulting in their rapid depletion. lack of appropriate security measures represents a major concern for health workers. this is a cause of concern in a highly populated country such as egypt, where the public may experience anxiety and even panic feelings, because basic protection measures are unavailable [ ] . knowledge is a prerequisite for establishing positive attitudes and promoting positive behaviors. therefore, it makes sense to invest in individuals' cognition towards the infection. regarding the senior students' attitude towards covid- , in the present study % of them agreed that covid- will be successfully controlled and % were confident that health care teams and scientists can win the fight against the coronavirus. interestingly, it was found that a greater students' knowledge relates to more confidence in covid- becoming successfully controlled (or . , % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). correlation between the students' attitude and practice indicates that their positive attitude is affecting their action towards covid- . this present study results showed that % of participants did not go to any crowded place, % of the students agreed that patients should disclose their exposure to covid- and % of the students kept the social distance of at least m from other people. however, the students showed bad practice when using masks as a protective measure (approximately %). that was directly related to their lower level of knowledge towards the importance of wearing masks (p < . ). that is supported by findings from a previous study, which reported that only about % of the participants were willing to wear face masks [ ] . interestingly, it was reported that females preferred not to go to any crowded place more than male students (or . , % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). in addition, females preferred to keep the social distance more than male students (or . , % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). moreover, students who live in other governorates kept social distance and agreed that patients should disclose their exposure to covid- rather than the students who live in the capital (or . , % confidence interval [ci] . - . ). it is noteworthy that a significant association existed between the practice of wearing masks when leaving home and using television as source of information (p < . ). likewise, an association existed between the practice of keeping the social distance at least m from other people and utilizing physicians as a source of information (p < . ). this encourages the public to avoid public meetings, including sports, ceremonies, meetings and school classes, in order to prevent a global transmission of coronavirus infection [ ] . however, many people ignore the importance of maintaining social distance because of attitudinal issues. it can be concluded that senior pharmacy students are generally knowledgeable about covid- . they lack knowledge about some of the clinical presentation of severe covid- infection such as hyper-coagulation. they also lack knowledge about the indication of wearing face masks. the present study constitutes the first attempt to examine knowledge and perceptions of future pharmacists in egypt on pandemic diseases. finally, the analysis of senior pharmacy students' knowledge and the factors affecting their attitudes and practices towards covid- could provide a reference for preventing further spread of this disease. it is recommended that strategies and education programs should be implemented to reduce the risk of infection among future pharmacists. senior pharmacy students should acquire increased awareness regarding the seriousness and consequences of a covid- infection. some of the results of this study were compared with research on other new emerging infectious diseases similar to coronavirus, because no analyses have been conducted concerning pharmacy students or students in general. covid- -navigating the uncharted the loss of igm memory b cells correlates with clinical disease in common variable immunodeficiency covid- ) situation report- . situation-reports/ -sitrep- -covid- .pdf?sfvrsn= ba e _ covid- overview pandemic potential of a strain of influenza a (h n ): early findings the reproductive number of covid- is higher compared to sars coronavirus estimates of the reproduction number for seasonal, pandemic, and zoonotic influenza: a systematic review of the literature college students' knowledge, attitudes and adherence to public service announcements on ebola in nigeria: suggestions for improving future ebola prevention education programmes the impact of knowledge and attitudes on adherence to tuberculosis treatment: a case-control study in a moroccan region health care professional development: working as a team to improve patient care knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding pandemic h n influenza among medical and dental residents and fellowships in shiraz iran awareness of the pandemic h n influenza global outbreak among medical students in karachi pakistan disaster : a novel approach to disaster medicine training for health professionals knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards covid- among chinese residents during the rapid rise period of the covid- outbreak: a quick online cross-sectional survey the use of cronbach's alpha when developing and reporting research instruments in science education knowledge, attitude and practice regarding dengue fever among the healthy population of highland and lowland communities in central nepal epidemiological and clinical characteristics of cases of novel coronavirus pneumonia in wuhan, china: a descriptive study community pharmacists: on the frontline of health service against covid- in lmics knowledge and attitude of healthcare workers about middle east respiratory syndrome in multispecialty hospitals of qassim saudi arabia identification of information types and sources by the public for promoting awareness of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia knowledge, perceptions, and attitude of egyptians towards the novel coronavirus disease (covid- ) covid- patients' clinical characteristics, discharge rate, and fatality rate of meta-analysis anticoagulant treatment is associated with decreased mortality in severe coronavirus disease patients with coagulopathy clinical characteristics of coronavirus disease in china mass gathering events and reducing further global spread of covid- : a political and public health dilemma. the lancet the researchers acknowledge our senior pharmacy students who took part in this study. the authors declare that they do not have conflict of interests. key: cord- -tx hciiv authors: engda, tigist title: the contribution of medical educational system of the college of medicine, and health sciences of the university of gondar in ethiopia on the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of graduate students of health sciences in relation to the prevention and control of nosocomial infections during the academic year of date: - - journal: bmc med educ doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tx hciiv background: nosocomial infection, also called a hospital-acquired infection, is an infection acquired during admitting patients in health care facilities. nosocomial infection can be prevented and controlled by giving training to those responsible. this study aimed to assess the contribution of the medical education system on the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of the graduate students of health sciences about the prevention and control of nosocomial infection in the college of medicine and health sciences at the university of gondar in the academic year of . method: an institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted among all graduate health science students posted in the different departments at the university of gondar in the college of medicine and health sciences from february to june . a total of study participants were included. data were analyzed using spss version . results: out of a total of respondents, only % have taken training for infection prevention; out of which % had taken the training for a year ago. moreover, only . % have good knowledge of nosocomial infections as a result of the training; and only . % have good understanding of the practical training given on prevention and control. only % have good attitude towards its prevention and control. conclusion: the result shows that only a few of the respondents have taken the infection prevention training. yet, a smaller proportion of them had good knowledge, attitude, and practice on nosocomial infections. hence, the medical education system should give more attention to the training of the nosocomial infection control by developing different strategies to prepare the students on these issues before they start their clinical attachment. nosocomial infection is a localized or systemic infection that is acquired in a health care facility that may manifest h after the patient's admission to or discharged from the health care facility [ ] . it can be caused by bacteria, viruses, parasites, and fungi that may be present in the air, surfaces, or equipment surrounding the health institutions [ ] . it can affect patients of all age groups; however, neonates, immunocompromised adults, and the elders are the most vulnerable ones [ , ] . nosocomial infections have been recognized as a problem affecting the quality of health care services and are the principal source of adverse healthcare effects. increased hospital stays, increased costs of healthcare, economic hardship to patients, and their families, and even deaths are some of the negative effects [ ] [ ] [ ] . the amount of nosocomial infections of low-and middle-income countries is higher because of the limited knowledge and utilization of post exposure prophylaxis (pep), limited knowledge of professional risks, low adherence to universal precautions (up), and inaccessibility of personal protective equipment (ppe) [ , , , ] . findings of several epidemiological studies show that hcws, mainly physicians, dentists, laboratories, and nurses are involved in the transmission of nosocomial infections [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . it has also been reported that its transmission increases during the performances of medical procedures whenever hcws fail to follow aseptic precautions [ , ] . the world health organization (who), in conjunction with the cdc, gives high attention to the prevention of nosocomial infections as it has developed a practical manual for the prevention of nosocomial infections globally (who, ) . some recommended strategies included in the manual were the use of hand decontamination, personal hygiene, utilization of personal protectives, and proper methods of handling soiled clothing when healthcare workers perform patient care activities. it also recommends methods of preventing environmental contamination including the cleaning of the hospital environment using hot superheated water, sterilizing patient equipment, and preventing the transmission of pathogens like hiv, hepatitis b and c viruses, and tb to the staff [ ] . efficient pre-service and in-service training given by incorporating in the medical education system supported with good monitoring and evaluation methods of hcw practices play a pivotal role in the sustainability of the knowledge, attitude, and practice of universal precautions and infection control [ , ] . this scheme was supported by many studies conducted worldwide. for example, in india, an educational module had effectively elevated the knowledge, attitude, and practice score of hcws from % before the intervention to % thereafter [ ] . in korea, it was also investigated that a group of nurses and medical students who had received education on hais showed high knowledge (p = . ) and performance (p < . ) levels [ ] . similarly, a study at seton hall university in new jersey, usa, indicated that the total score for the knowledge category was % [ ] . likewise, a study in egypt reported that physicians had the best level of knowledge, but the least in practicing general safety measures than others in the preintervention phase. however, they increased their practice score from . to . % after receiving continuing education [ ] . a study in pakistan reported that the knowledge score was . with a median of . the dispenser had the highest knowledge score while the housekeepers had the lowest. knowledge about the mode of transmission of bloodborne pathogen and the work experience alone significantly predicted the use of universal precaution methods in multiple linear regression models [ ] . this principle is also supported by studies conducted in ethiopia. in , a cross-sectional study was conducted in addis ababa on hcws who received training on transmission, vaccination, and diagnosis of hbv to assess their knowledge of risk factors for hbv. the result showed that more than % of the respondents had the knowledge of the modes of transmission and prevention of hbv; . % had a positive attitude towards following infection control guidelines [ ] . similarly, a study conducted in ethiopia at dire dawa university on the medical and health sciences students reported that almost all of the respondents had good knowledge of the transmission, treatment, and prevention of hbv. also, . % of them had good attitudes towards the importance of standard precautions, but . % had poor practices in applying the recommended standard precautions [ ] . in another study, a hospitalbased cross-sectional investigation was conducted among health workers who were taking training about infection and prevention of hospital-acquired infections at debre markos hospital in ethiopia. the results showed that . % of them were found to be knowledgeable; however, only . % of the respondents demonstrated good practice in infection prevention. moreover, respondents with older age, longer work experience, and higher educational status excelled in both knowledge and practice of infection prevention. inservice training, availability of infection prevention supplies, and adherence to infection prevention guidelines were also associated with the practice of infection prevention [ ] . on the other hand, a study conducted at the university of gondar hospital about hand hygiene compliance on study participants showed that only . % had the knowledge about it and . % had received training about hand hygiene compliance, respectively [ ] . hand hygiene is an important means for the control and prevention of nosocomial infection. therefore, the current study intended to determine the impact of the medical education system on the knowledge, attitude, and practice of graduate health sciences students about the prevention and control of nosocomial infections at the university of gondar. an institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted with graduate students from the college of medicine and health sciences at the university of gondar. data collection was made between february and june of . students who attended the regular academic program at the university of gondar, college of medicine and health sciences were the source population. however, only graduate classes of health science students were taken as the study population. before data collection, eleven departments were selected for sampling: health informatics, medical laboratory sciences, health officer, physiotherapy, environmental and occupational health and safety, psychiatry, optometry, midwifery, nursing, pharmacy, and anesthesia. there were graduate students of health sciences in the academic year of . the sample size was determined using a single random sampling method. since no similar study was found in the area, % were taken as a confidence interval. then, the calculated sample size was and by adding a % non-response rate, the final calculated sample size became (fig. ) . the questionnaire was constructed from emergent themes reviewed in the literature and items were derived from the established guidelines set by a task force committee on infection control practices advisory committee [ , ] . the questionnaire includes questions subdivided into four categories: sociodemographic, knowledge, attitude, and practice towards nosocomial infections. knowledge was assessed using questions containing three alternative choices each. the answers from the given alternatives were symbolized as ' ' for poor, ' ' for fair, and ' ' for good. a higher score in the questions concerning nosocomial infections is considered to be good knowledge of nosocomial infections. attitude was measured using questions in which answers for each question were assigned as for 'disagree', for 'neutral', and for 'agree.' higher score achieved was considered as a positive attitude toward standard precaution. moreover, their practice towards the prevention and control of nosocomial infections was assessed using questions with three alternative answers which were assigned as ' ' for poor, ' ' for fair, and ' ' for good (table , table , and table ). bloom's cut-off point was used to determine the level of knowledge, attitude, and practice because the conceptual framework of the present study was based on the taxonomy of educational objectives developed by bloom ( ) . according to bloom's taxonomy ( ), human behaviors are derived from the integration of the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains. knowledge, attitudes, and practices could be representatives of the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains, respectively. knowledge refers to the factual, conceptual, procedural, and met cognitive thought [ ] . attitude is an internal or covert feeling and emotion; or selective nature of intended behavior which represents the affective domain. practice represents the psychomotor domain which refers to the physical movement, coordination and use of motor or neuromuscular activities [ ] . accordingly, participants' overall knowledge and practice are considered as good if the score is % and above; moderate if the score is between and %; and poor if the score is less than %. similarly, attitude towards nosocomial infection was assessed using questions. responses to questions related to attitude were graded on a -point likert scale with an agreement scale ranging from ' ' for disagree to ' ' for agree [ ] . the overall level of attitude was categorized using bloom's cut-off point: positive if the score was % and above; neutral if the score was - %; and negative if the score was less than %. a simple random sampling method and lottery technique were used to select the respondents and a quantitative method of data collection was employed through a self-administered questionnaire. the quantitative method involves assessment of the impact of medical education on the knowledge, attitude, and practices of graduate students on the prevention and control of nosocomial infection. the data collection instrument format was developed in english by different individuals for its accuracy and desired results. the data collectors used a self-administered questionnaire for graduate students of the health sciences, class of . after receiving a complete response of the questionnaires, data were analyzed using descriptive statistics by ibm spss version . . demographic characteristics are presented in tabular form using descriptive statistics and reported as mean, median, standard deviation, frequency, and percentage as presented in tables. the study was conducted after a written ethical clearance is obtained from the ethical research committee of the school of biomedical laboratory sciences and college of medicine and health sciences. moreover, the consent forms of the participants were completed voluntarily by the study participants themselves. pretest to evaluate the understandability and applicability of the instruments used, pretest data were collected and checked from medical laboratory graduate students using a self-administered questionnaire. self-administered questionnaires were collected from respondents. out of these respondents, % were female while only % of them were above years of age. the proportions of respondents were: ( . %) health informatics, ( . %) medical laboratory sciences, ( . %) health officers, ( . %) physiotherapy, ( . %) environmental and occupational health and safety, ( . %) psychiatry, ( . %) optometry, ( . %) midwifery, ( . %) nursing, ( . %) pharmacy, and ( . %) anesthesia graduated students. only % of the respondents had been trained in infection, prevention out of which % took the training at least a year ago ( table ) . even though % of the respondents stated that they had taken training on nosocomial infections, only . % had good knowledge of nosocomial infections (fig. ) . from the questions administered, the score of knowledge of the respondents ranged from to , with a mean score of . at std. of + . (table ) . as reflected in table , out of the total respondents, . % had good knowledge of the modes of transmission and risk factors for nosocomial infections; . % of the respondents also stated that they were fully aware of hand-washing guidelines; . % knew where and how the contents in biohazard bags or containers are being disposed. it is also shown that table questioner for the assessment of knowledge of graduate health sciences students towards nosocomial infection instruction: to complete this section, please make a tick "✓" on the number corresponds to how you agree with the given alternatives = poor, = fair and = good table questioner for the assessment of practice of graduate health sciences students towards nosocomial infection instruction: to complete this section, please make a tick "✓" on the number corresponds to how you agree with the given statement = poor, = fair, = good . % of them knew that nosocomial infections could be transmitted via fomites, and . % of the respondents understood that healthcare facilities harbor a variety of microorganisms that could be transmitted by healthcare workers. then, . % of respondents were fully aware of safety precautions for the disposal of used medical equipment, and . % of them believed that neutropenic patients like those with diseases of the respiratory system should be kept in private rooms. furthermore, . % of the graduates were knowledgeable in the use of alcohol-based formulations, and . % of them stated that some microorganisms were not totally removed by alcoholbased solutions. the overall practice scores showed that . % have good practice in the prevention and control of nosocomial infection. the score of the practice of the respondents ranged from to , with a mean of . atstd+ . (table ) . respondents reflection to correctly following guidelines for the use of alcohol-based solutions before and after patient care activities were . %; before opening vascular access equipment were . %; between each patient contact were . %; before and after direct contact with patients' intact skin were . %; moving from a contaminated body site to a clean table questioner for the assessment of attitude of graduate health sciences students towards nosocomial infection instruction: to complete this section, please make a tick "✓" on the number corresponds to how you agree with the given statement = disagree, = neutral, = agree body site were . %; before and after drawing or manipulating patient's body fluid samples were . %; before inserting indwelling urinary catheters were . %; and after touching inanimate objects and equipment in the patients' room were . %. of all, . % of the respondents used their computer keyboards with their glove during busy workload. finally, . % of the respondents removed their rings, watches, or bracelets during hand hygiene (table ) . the attitudes of students towards the prevention and control of nosocomial infection were % (fig. ) . of the total respondents, . % believed that nosocomial infections are posing serious negative outcomes but . % responded the opposite while a colleague is noncompliant with the recommended guidelines for patient safety. moreover, . % of the respondents regularly (table ) . nosocomial infection is one of the most important challenges in health institutions. therefore, this study assessed the knowledge, attitude, practice, and associated factors of infection prevention among health science graduate students. the overall score of knowledge ( . %) was lower than the study conducted in the usa ( %) and nepal ( %) [ , ] . similarly, . % had good knowledge of their etiology, modes of transmission, and risk factors of nosocomial infections which were also lower than the study conducted in new jersey, usa ( . %), and nepal ( %). moreover, only . % of the participants knew fomites as transmission factors, which is still lower than the study conducted in the usa ( . %) [ , ] . this might be due to a difference in study participants. in the usa, the study participants were registered nurses who were working in health care institutions and they might develop knowledge from their experiences and/or in-service training. however, in this study, the participants were graduate students of which % never took training on the prevention and control of nosocomial infections. this shows that not all health science students in this college are taking training before their clinical attachments. in the findings of this study, only . % had good practice in the prevention and control of nosocomial infections of which only . % followed the guidelines for the use of alcohol-containing hand sanitizer which is lower than the study conducted in the usa ( %), but higher than a study conducted in china ( %) [ , ] . this may be due to the difference in study participants, the accessibility of alcohol-containing hand sanitizer, and the large difference in course curriculum where infection prevention might not be incorporated in all of the target population. possibly for similar reasons, the attitude of study participants towards the prevention and control of nosocomial infection ( %) was lower than a study carried out in the usa ( . %) and nepal ( . %) [ , ] . a . % positive attitude towards following the recommended guidelines for reducing the transmission of nosocomial infections was lower than a study conducted among health care workers at addis ababa in ethiopia ( . %) [ ] . this might be due to a difference in study participants in addis ababa, where they were registered health care workers who were working in the health institution and they might develop knowledge, attitude, and practice either through their experience or in-service training. however, in this study, the participants were graduate students who reported that % of them never took training on the prevention and control of nosocomial infections before their clinical attachment. generally, more than half of the respondents had poor knowledge, attitude, and practice on nosocomial infection and the application of infection and prevention procedures. the medical education system is the most important and effective tool to bring a better outcome for controlling and preventing nosocomial infections. incorporating the necessary knowledge into the regular course curricula, organizing training modules to medical students before starting clinical attachment, providing different guidelines and standard operating procedures are also helpful in understanding the nature of infections and how, when, and where to prevent and control nosocomial infection. therefore, this study showed that a smaller number of respondents had taken infection prevention training on their regular medical system. consequently, smaller proportions of them had good knowledge, attitude, and practice on the nature of the infection, prevention, and control strategies for nosocomial infections. therefore, to improve the level of knowledge, attitude, and practice of students towards nosocomial infections, strengthening the medical education system through relevant seminars including short and long-term training is essential. at the same time, the availability of infection prevention guidelines, standard operating procedures, and personal protective equipment like alcohol-based solutions in health institutions are important. departments, schools, and college administrative officers should work together to facilitate infection prevention training programs for all health science students before starting their clinical attachments. the ministry of health and ministry of education should work to enforce the universities to incorporate infection prevention knowledge into the course curricula for all health science students. all health care institutions must be prepared to give vaccination of common hospital-acquired diseases by making available infection prevention materials and standard operational author's contributions te: conception of a research idea, study design, data analysis, interpretation, and manuscript write up. the author(s) read and approved the final manuscript. no one was responsible for the funding of this research. all data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this article. ethics approval and consent to participate ethical clearance was obtained from the research and ethical review committee of the school of biomedical and laboratory sciences, college of medicine and health sciences, university of gondar. moreover, written consent was taken from each participant after they understood the purpose of the study. all the subjects' data were kept in full confidentiality and were not being disclosed to an unauthorized person. not applicable. extended hospital stay days, mortality and increased cost of healthcare) nurse or physician) is non-compliant with the recommended guidelines for patient safety in my opinion, healthcare workers should be sanctioned for non-compliance with protocols for reducing transmission of nosocomial infections (for example, yearly assessment, and denied promotion) in my opinion, healthcare workers should be rewarded (for example, given plaques, certificate) for compliance with protocols aimed at reducing transmission of nosocomial the number of graduate health science students; % indicates percentage engda prevention of hospital acquired infections: a practical guide is us health really the best in the world? decreasing urinary tract infections through staff development, outcomes, and nursing process statistical abstract of the united states guidelines for hand hygiene in health care settings an outbreak of hepatitis c virus infections among patients at a hematology/oncology clinic new jersey: pearson education cluster of cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome among toronto healthcare workers after implementation of infection control precautions: a case series use of influenza a (h n ) monovalent vaccine: recommendations of the advisory committee on immunization practices (acip) the global burden of disease attributable to contaminated injections given in health care settings guidelines for preventing the transmission of mycobacterium tuberculosis in health-care settings training self-assessment and task-selection skills: a cognitive approach to improving self-regulated learning student self-assessment: the key to stronger student motivation and higher achievement. educ horizons impact of education on knowledge, attitudes and practices among various categories of health care workers on nosocomial infections knowledge and performance of the universal precautions by nursing and medical students in korea exploring knowledge, attitudes and practices of registered nurses regarding the spread of nosocomial infections. seton hall university dissertations and theses (etds): paper poor knowledge predictor of nonadherence to universal precautions for blood borne pathogens at first level care facilities in pakistan assessment of knowledge, attitudes and practices toward prevention of hepatitis b virus infection among students of medicine and health sciences in northwest ethiopia knowledge, practice and associated factors of infection prevention among healthcare workers in debre markos referral hospital, northwest ethiopia. bmc hand hygiene compliance and associated factors among health care providers in gondar university hospital attitude and practice of nursing students regarding hand hygiene in the western region of nepal taxonomy education attitude and practice of nursing students on hospital acquired infections in western region of nepal the author declares that there is no competing interest.received: june accepted: october key: cord- -pmchx r authors: shin, dongmin; shim, yugeun; yu, hangyeol; lee, seewoo; kim, byungsoo; choi, youngduck title: saint+: integrating temporal features for ednet correctness prediction date: - - journal: nan doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: pmchx r we propose saint+, a successor of saint which is a transformer based knowledge tracing model that separately processes exercise information and student response information. following the architecture of saint, saint+ has an encoder-decoder structure where the encoder applies self-attention layers to a stream of exercise embeddings, and the decoder alternately applies self-attention layers and encoder-decoder attention layers to streams of response embeddings and encoder output. moreover, saint+ incorporates two temporal feature embeddings into the response embeddings: elapsed time, the time taken for a student to answer, and lag time, the time interval between adjacent learning activities. we empirically evaluate the effectiveness of saint+ on ednet, the largest publicly available benchmark dataset in the education domain. experimental results show that saint+ achieves state-of-the-art performance in knowledge tracing with an improvement of . % in area under receiver operating characteristic curve compared to saint, the current state-of-the-art model in ednet dataset. the recent covid- pandemic has raised needs for social distancing, leading many organizations to develop virtual and remote services to prevent widespread infection of the disease. accordingly, educational systems have developed remote learning environments including massive open online courses and intelligent tutoring systems (itss). knowledge tracing, modeling a student's knowledge state based on the history of their learning activities records, is a fundamental task for creating its that aims to provide personalized learning experiences to each student. traditionally, bayesian knowledge tracing [ , , , - , , , , ] and collaborative filtering based models [ , ] were common approaches for knowledge tracing. however, with the widespread adoption of deep learning (dl) in many machine learning problems, dl based models [ , , , - , , , , , ] have become the de facto standard for knowledge tracing by capturing complex relations among interactions in students' learning activities records. the strength of the dl based models has become amplified with the advent of large scale public benchmark dataset in artificial intelligence in education. ednet [ ] is such a publicly available dataset which is the largest in scale with more than m learning activities records from around k students. in this paper, we propose saint+, a successor of saint [ ] which enhances knowledge tracing with temporal feature embeddings, and empirically verify the effectiveness of the model on ednet dataset. saint is a transformer [ ] based knowledge tracing model that separately processes information of exercise and student response. specifically, a stream of exercises that a student consumes is fed to an encoder, and a decoder gets a corresponding response sequence and encoder output sequence, computing the final output sequence of the model. saint+ augments saint by integrating two temporal feature embeddings: elapsed time, the time taken for a student to answer, and lag time, the time interval between adjacent learning activities. empirical evaluations conducted on ednet dataset show that saint+ improves saint, the current state-of-the-art knowledge tracing model on ednet dataset, by . % in area under receiver operating characteristic curve (auc). also, the experimental results show that incorporating the temporal features into the decoder input achieves the best auc compared to incorporating them into the encoder input, and both the encoder and decoder input, verifying the hypothesis that separately processing exercise information and student response information is appropriate for knowledge tracing. knowledge tracing is a fundamental task for many computer-aided educational applications and has been studied extensively in the field of aied. traditional approaches addressed knowledge tracing based on bayesian knowledge tracing (bkt) [ , , , - , , , , ] and collaborative filtering (cf) [ , ] . basically, bkt is the hidden markov model where a latent variable represents evolving student knowledge. bkt assumes the latent student knowledge as a set of binary variables: either the student mastered the knowledge or not. each latent variable is updated based on observations of the student correctly applying the knowledge which are also binary: either the student correctly or incorrectly answered a given exercise. on the other hand, cf based approaches model students and exercises as low-rank matrices. each vector in the student matrix and exercise matrix represents latent traits of each student and latent knowledge required for each exercise, respectively. the probability of a student correctly answers to an exercise is calculated by applying the sigmoid function to the dot product between the corresponding student and exercise vectors. the advances of deep learning (dl) have given rise to neural network based knowledge tracing models. dkt [ ] is the first dl based knowledge tracing model. dkt models students' evolving knowledge state through recurrent neural network (rnn) which compresses their past learning activities in a hidden layer. like many rnn based models that commonly leverage attention mechanism, npa [ ] models student knowledge through bidirectional long-short term memory (bi-lstm) network equipped with an attention layer that weighs more importance to relevant parts of their learning history for prediction. ekt [ ] is also a bi-lstm knowledge tracing model with an attention layer. however, ekt addresses the cold start problem in knowledge tracing by exploiting not only students' learning activities records but also text descriptions of exercises. not all dl based knowledge tracing models are based on rnn architecture. dkvmn [ ] is a memory-augmented neural network knowledge tracing model where the key matrix stores knowledge concepts and the value matrix stores students' mastery levels of corresponding concepts. ckt [ ] is a knowledge tracing model that applies hierarchical convolutional operations to extract learning rate features from student's learning activities history. applying self-attention mechanism in transformer [ ] architecture, which is de facto standard to many sequential prediction tasks, to knowledge tracing is also an actively studied area. sakt [ ] is the first knowledge tracing model with self-attention layers. in each self-attention layer of sakt, each query is an exercise embedding vector, and key and value are interaction embedding vectors. saint [ ] is the first transformer based knowledge tracing model which leverages encoder-decoder architecture composed of stacked self-attention layers. unlike sakt, saint gets separated streams of exercises and responses as inputs where a sequence of exercises are fed to the encoder, and a sequence of encoder outputs and responses are fed to the decoder. akt [ ] also adopts self-attention layers for knowledge tracing. the attention weights in akt are decayed exponentially based on the context-aware relative distance measure. moreover, akt uses the rasch model based exercise and exercise-response embeddings to avoid overparameterization and overfitting. recently, several works [ , ] attempt to incorporate graph structure to the knowledge tracing model. [ ] formulate knowledge tracing as a time series nodelevel classification task in graph structure and proposes gkt which extracts representation of each knowledge concept by aggregating representations of neighboring concepts. hgkt [ ] applies graph neural network to get hierarchical exercise graph which better represent groups of similar exercises. we formulate knowledge tracing as a task of predicting the probability of a student's answer being correct to a particular exercise given their previous interaction histories. formally, the student's learning activity is recorded as an interaction sequence , . . . , . each interaction = ( , ) is a tuple of exercise information , the -th exercise given to the student with related metadata, such as the type of the exercise, and response information , the student's response to the exercise along with related metadata including the correctness of the response, the duration of time the student took to respond and the time interval between the current and previous interactions. the student's response correctness ∈ { , } is equal to if the student answered the -th exercise correctly and if not. thus, knowledge tracing aims to estimate the probability, in this subsection, we give a brief review of saint, a separated self-attentive neural knowledge tracing. we refer the paper [ ] for those who want to lean detailed aspects of saint. saint is a knowledge tracing model based on transformer [ ] architecture which consists of an encoder and a decoder. it separates a stream of student interactions into two sequences: an exercise sequence and a response sequence. then, the encoder takes a sequence of exercise embeddings = [ , , . . . , ] as input and pass an output sequence = [ , , . . . , ] to the decoder. the decoder additionally takes a shifted response embedding sequence = [ , , , . . . , − ] as input, whose first element is a start token embedding, to produce the final output sequenceˆ= [ˆ ,ˆ , . . . ,ˆ]. eachˆis an estimated probability of the student's answer to the -th exercise being correct given the current exercise information and the past interactions , , . . . , − . the most fundamental part of saint is a multi-head attention layer. let ℎ be the number of heads. when input query matrix , key matrix , and value matrix are given, we compute = , = , and = for each ≤ ≤ ℎ, where , , and are weight matrices of query, key and value, respectively. then, the scaled dot-product attention computes each head matrix, and the final output is a linear transformation of concatenated head matrices, where is a dimension of the query and key vectors, and is a weight matrix. note that the masking mechanism overwrites the region above the diagonal of the matrix with −∞ so that the corresponding region of the softmax output becomes zero. this prevents the current position from attending to subsequent positions. in other words, saint uses no future information from the sequence while training. the encoder block consists of sequentially aligned copies of encoder layers. a single encoder layer is a multi-headed self-attention layer with an upper triangular mask followed by a feed forward network (ffn) which is defined by where , and , are weights and biases, respectively. suppose is given as input to an encoder layer. then, the output sequence is computed as follows: here, the input sequence for the foremost encoder layer is an exercise embedding sequence while each subsequent layer takes the feed forward output of the previous layer. note that we apply layer normalization [ ] and skip connection [ ] to every sub-layer. the decoder is a sequence of identical decoder layers, which consists of two multi-head attention layers with upper triangular masks followed by a feed forward network as well. suppose is an input sequence to a decoder layer. if the layer is the foremost, is the response embedding sequence . otherwise, it is the output sequence from the previous decoder layer. the first layer is a multi-headed self-attention layer which only takes . then, its output serves as queries for the second attention whose keys and values are the encoder output . the computation can be summarized as follows: ( )). the output of the last decoder layer is passed to a fully connected layer to produce the final output of the model. saint takes sequences of exercise embeddings and response embeddings, where each entry in the exercise embedding sequence is the sum of vectors of an exercise id, an exercise category and the position, and each entry in the response embedding sequence is the sum of vectors of a response correctness and the position. saint+ augments response embeddings with two temporal feature embeddings: elapsed time, the duration of time a student took to respond, and lag time, the time interval between the current and previous interactions (figure ). the embedding vectors for elapsed time and lag time are added to the response embeddings ( figure ). in the following subsections, we provide detailed explanations of the two temporal feature embeddings. elapsed time is an amount of time that a student spent on solving a given exercise. for example, in figure , et = − (resp. et = − ) is the elapsed time for the exercise (resp. exercise ). if the student does not have enough knowledge and skills for the exercise, it would be hard to respond correctly within the recommended time limit. hence, elapsed time provides strong evidence for a student's proficiency in knowledge and skills, and student's understanding of concepts associated with the exercise. we propose two different approaches to embed elapsed times as latent vectors: continuous embedding and categorical embedding. in continuous embedding, a latent embedding vector for an elapsed time et is computed as v et = et · w elapsed_time , where w elapsed_time is a single learnable vector. for categorical embedding, unique latent vectors are assigned to each integer seconds. we set the maximum elapsed time as seconds and any time more than that is capped off to seconds. lag time is the time gap between interactions, an important factor that affects complex phenomena occurring in students' learning process. for instance, students tend to forget what they have learned as time passes. if a lot of time passed after a student answers an exercise about certain concepts, it would be hard to respond to similar exercises correctly, even if they provided the correct answer to the exercise before. on the other hand, students need time to refresh. by taking a rest, their brains organize and arrange what they have learned, and prepare for the next learning session. we define lag time as the time interval between the moment a student encountered the current exercise and the moment the student consumed the previous exercise. for instance, in figure , lag time for the exercise (resp. exercise ) is lt = − (resp. lt = − ). similar to the elapsed time embedding, we use continuous embedding and categorical embedding for lag time. in continuous embedding, a latent embedding vector for a lag time lt is computed as v lt = lt · w lag_time , where w lag_time is a trainable vector. for categorical embedding, lag times are discretized as integer minutes , , , , , , , , , . . . , . as a result, there are a total of trainable unique latent vectors assigned to each integer minute. ednet [ ] is the largest publicly available benchmark dataset in education domain consisting of interaction logs collected by santa . we conduct experiments on an updated version of ednet-kt , which contains problem-solving logs from january st, to june st, . details of the dataset statistics are provided in table . also, the distributions of elapsed time and lag time of the dataset are shown in figure . we use interaction logs of the most recent k students as test set and % (resp. %) of the remaining dataset are used as training (resp. validation) set. # of interactions # of students # of exercises we compare saint+ against benchmark knowledge tracing models, dkt [ ] , dkvmn [ ] , sakt [ ] and saint [ ] : • dkt is a simple rnn-based model that uses concept and response correctness as input features, and models student's knowledge status as rnn's hidden state vectors. we choose an lstm [ ] architecture. also, we consider each unique exercise id as a concept associated with the exercise. • dkvmn is a memory augmented neural network based model where the key matrix stores knowledge concepts and the value matrix stores students' mastery levels of the corresponding concepts. we use each exercise id as a concept of the corresponding exercise. • sakt is the first knowledge tracing model that utilizes transformer's self-attention architecture. it is a single encoder-based model where exercise ids are used as queries and interaction ids are used as keys and values. • saint is the first transformer-based knowledge tracing model which leverages an encoderdecoder structure to process information of question and student response separately. the encoder takes a sequence of question embeddings and the decoder gets a sequence of encoder outputs and response embeddings to compute the final output. we use the accuracy (acc) and the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (auc) as the performance metric. we pick the weight with the best validation auc and evaluate them on the test set. for saint+ and saint, we use adam optimizer with = . , = . , = . and = − , and set warmup steps to . the window size, number of layers, dimension of the model, dropout rate and batch size is set to , , , . and , respectively. for other benchmark models, both embedding and hidden dimensions of dkt, dkvmn and sakt are searched over [ , , , , , ] , and the best results are reported on the test dataset. also, we set the number of latent concepts as for dkvmn. table shows the performance comparison of saint+ with the benchmark knowledge tracing models. compared to the benchmark models, saint+ achieves increases of acc and auc maximally up to . % and . %, respectively. also, saint+ improves saint with . % and . % gain in acc and auc, respectively, demonstrating the effectiveness of integrating the temporal features for knowledge tracing. . . temporal feature embedding: continuous vs. categorical. we compare different approaches for embedding temporal features: continuous and categorical. modeling elapsed time in continuous (resp. categorical) fashion assumes that the relationship between a student's knowledge status and the difficulty of a question for the student is a smooth (resp. stepwise) function of time. similarly, for lag time, continuous (resp. categorical) modeling addresses various aspects in a students' learning process including forgetting, re-organizing concepts and improvement change smoothly (resp. table show that the best result is obtained when using continuous embedding for elapsed time and categorical embedding for lag time. table . when used alone, lag time increases performance more than elapsed time. moreover, regardless of the temporal features used, utilizing only one feature is not good as using both features together (saint+), while certain improvements are obtained compared to saint. figure . since both elapsed time and lag time arise as a result of student response, this approach is naturally aligned with the core idea of saint that providing exercise information to the encoder and response information to the decoder is appropriate for knowledge tracing. we compare saint+ (decoder only) with other two variants: feeding the temporal features to ) the encoder only, and ) both the encoder and the decoder. table summarizes the results. as expected, saint+ shows the best performance among the variants. also, saint+ and the variants show better results than saint, demonstrating that the temporal features provide useful information for estimating knowledge status. in this paper, we proposed saint+, a transformer based knowledge tracing model that processes exercise information and student response information separately, and integrates two temporal feature embeddings into the response embeddings: elapsed time and lag time. experiments conducted on ednet dataset show that saint+ improves saint, the former state-of-the-art knowledge tracing model, in both acc and auc. furthermore, the best result was obtained by incorporating the temporal features into the decoder input, verifying the hypothesis that separately processing exercise information and student response information is appropriate for knowledge tracing. avenues of future work include ) modeling not only students' problem-solving records, but also various learning activities, such as watching lectures and studying explanations for each exercise, ) exploring architectures for knowledge tracing models other than transformer based encoder-decoder model that separately processes exercise information and student response information. towards an appropriate query, key, and value computation for knowledge tracing ednet: a large-scale hierarchical dataset in education knowledge tracing: modeling the acquisition of procedural knowledge. user modeling and user-adapted interaction more accurate student modeling through contextual estimation of slip and guess probabilities in bayesian knowledge tracing context-aware attentive knowledge tracing deep residual learning for image recognition long short-term memory ekt: exercise-aware knowledge tracing for student performance prediction estimating programming knowledge with bayesian knowledge tracing machine learning approaches for learning analytics: collaborative filtering or regression with experts creating a neural pedagogical agent by jointly learning to review and assess graph-based knowledge tracing: modeling student proficiency using graph neural network a self-attentive model for knowledge tracing navigating the parameter space of bayesian knowledge tracing models: visualizations of the convergence of the expectation maximization algorithm adapting bayesian knowledge tracing to a massive open online course in edx modeling individualization in a bayesian networks implementation of knowledge tracing deep knowledge tracing does time matter? modeling the effect of time with bayesian knowledge tracing incorporating scaffolding and tutor context into bayesian knowledge tracing to predict inquiry skill acquisition convolutional knowledge tracing: modeling individualization in student learning process recommender system for predicting student performance hgkt: introducing problem schema with hierarchical exercise graph for knowledge tracing properties of the bayesian knowledge tracing model attention is all you need individualized bayesian knowledge tracing models dynamic key-value memory networks for knowledge tracing key: cord- -tk vvxj authors: askarian, mehrdad; mclaws, mary-louise; meylan, marysia title: knowledge, attitude, and practices related to standard precautions of surgeons and physicians in university-affiliated hospitals of shiraz, iran date: - - journal: int j infect dis doi: . /j.ijid. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tk vvxj objective: to measure levels of knowledge, attitudes, and practice toward standard precautions (sp) in medical practitioners of shiraz university of medical sciences affiliated hospitals in iran. method: in this cross-sectional study, knowledge, attitude, and practice related to sp among four medical staff groups – surgeons, surgical residents, physicians and medical residents – were assessed using a questionnaire. results: across the four medical staffing groups the median levels of knowledge ranged from to (maximum score ), median attitude scores were high ranging from to (maximum score ), while median practice scores were low, ranging from to (maximum score ). a moderate relationship between knowledge and attitudes was found in surgical residents and medical residents (r = . , p = . and r = . , p = . , respectively). no significant correlation was found between knowledge and practice between the groups. a significant but poor (r = . , p = . ) relationship between attitude and practice was found in surgical residents. conclusion: specific training programs may have to target newly graduated medical practitioners to establish acceptance of appropriate practices that will enable them to adopt and adhere to sp while their older counterparts may require more intense continuous assistance. objective: to measure levels of knowledge, attitudes, and practice toward standard precautions (sp) in medical practitioners of shiraz university of medical sciences affiliated hospitals in iran. method: in this cross-sectional study, knowledge, attitude, and practice related to sp among four medical staff groups -surgeons, surgical residents, physicians and medical residents -were assessed using a questionnaire. results: across the four medical staffing groups the median levels of knowledge ranged from to (maximum score ), median attitude scores were high ranging from to (maximum score ), while median practice scores were low, ranging from to (maximum score ). a moderate relationship between knowledge and attitudes was found in surgical residents and medical residents (r = . , p = . and r = . , p = . , respectively). no significant correlation was found between knowledge and practice between the groups. a significant but poor (r = . , p = . ) relationship between attitude and practice was found in surgical residents. conclusion: specific training programs may have to target newly graduated medical practitioners to establish acceptance of appropriate practices that will enable them to adopt and adhere to sp while their older counterparts may require more intense continuous assistance. # international society for infectious diseases. published by elsevier ltd. all rights reserved. a heightened understanding of transmission of blood-borne diseases in the mid- s [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] to healthcare workers (hcws), including surgeons, physicians, and residents in training, and the importance of adherence to standard precautions (sp) is well accepted. adherence to sp is even more important with the emergence of infectious diseases, such as avian influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and the threat of bioterrorism. the problems of containing drugresistant organisms such as methicillin-resistant staphylococcus - and vancomycin-resistant enterococci from colonizing patients give a continuous reminder to hcws that adherence to sp is also pivotal to patient safety in terms of healthcare-associated infections. in , the centers for disease control proposed guidelines for isolation precautions in hospitals, as new, two-tiered best practice of infection control precautions that are standard for all patients who are to be regarded as potential carriers of pathogenic microorganisms. , strict adherence to sp guidelines is necessary to prevent exposure to potentially life-threatening infections, , - yet a high level of compliance with sp has been reported to be problematic worldwide. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] medical practitioners, especially surgeons, are among high-risk healthcare workers for exposure to blood-borne or other infections during direct patient contact. [ ] [ ] [ ] the purpose of our study was to measure the level of knowledge, attitude, and practice in surgeons and physicians in shiraz university of medical sciences affiliated hospitals. a cross-sectional survey was conducted in shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran between may and november of four groups of medical staff; the questionnaire was to be answered by physicians, surgeons, surgical residents, and medical residents. the questionnaire was prepared by an infection control expert, a pediatrician certified in infectious diseases, and a psychiatrist, and reviewed by experts from the iranian national expert group of infection control specialists. it consisted of questions on knowledge, attitude, and practice of the guidelines with respect to standard isolation precautions as described by the cdc. the questionnaire was pre-tested on a random sample of participants to ensure practicability, validity, and interpretation of responses. the validity of the questionnaire was assessed using the kuder-richardson test for reliability and cronbach's alpha internal consistency coefficient. items in the questionnaire included demographic data, specialty and status of medical practitioner (surgeon, physician, surgical, or medical resident), previous sp education, willingness to be trained, and nine questions pertaining to hand-washing, personal protective equipment, m. askarian et al. use of antiseptic solution, and disposal method for used syringes. responses to items for knowledge were ''yes'', ''no'', or ''don't know''. the questions used to assess attitude were in the format of the likert scale with responses that included ''very strong'', ''strong'', ''considerable'', ''weak'', or ''null'' and the five-point likert scale response for practice questions (always, often, sometimes, seldom, never). all responses in accordance with cdc guidelines , were given a score value of for correct answers to the knowledge questions and when answers for practice questions were ''always'', while a score zero was assigned to all other answers. the total scores ranged from zero to . for attitude questions, a score of was equivalent to the answer ''very strong'' and a score of to ''nil'', therefore, the total score ranged from to ( table ). the questionnaire was pre-tested on randomly-selected members from the target population with high test-retest reliability (alpha = . ). descriptive and inferential statistics including significance tests, wilcoxon rank-sum test, kruskall-wallis test, and spearman correlation coefficient were performed using spss version . . alpha was set at the % level. of the questionnaires distributed, ( %) were returned completed. participants included senior medical staff ( surgeons and physicians) and residents ( surgical residents and medical residents) ( table ). there were more male, . % ( p = . ) than female surgeons, while there was no significant ( p = . ) gender difference within the physicians, . % males. neither were there significant differences in the proportion of male surgical residents ( . %, p = . ) and male medical residents ( . %, p = . ). the median age of all senior medical staff was years (range - years) and years (range - years) for all residents ( table ) . regardless of the status of medical practitioners, the majority ( . % senior practitioners and . % residents) reported no previous formal sp education and most ( . % senior practitioners and . % residents) were willing to receive sp training ( table ) . the median scores for sp knowledge for all medical practitioners ranged from to , while the range of median scores for attitudes was from to and that for practices from to ( table ). the median scores for knowledge and attitude were not significantly different ( p = . and p = . , respectively) between surgeons (knowledge median . and attitudes median score ) and physicians (knowledge median score . and attitudes median score ); median scores for practices were less than half the possible total score of nine, although the median scores for surgeons, . , and physicians, . , were equal but differed significantly ( p = . ) ( table ) . although median scores for knowledge and attitudes were moderate to high, surgeons were the only group where a knowledge, attitude, and practices related to standard precautions moderate to strong (r = . ) relationship between knowledge and attitudes was significant ( p < . ) while for other medical groups this relationship was poor ( table ). the relationship between knowledge and practices for all practitioners was not significant, as was the case for attitudes and practices, where correlations were not significant for all practitioners except surgical residents, where the relationship was significant but not strong, r = . ( p = . ) ( table ). all medical practitioners' levels of knowledge were high for the same six items that were answered correctly by at least three quarters of practitioners within each group (table ) . few medical practitioners answered correctly that needles should not be bent before disposal with correct knowledge ranging from . % (physicians) to . % (medical residents). as few as . % of surgeons and . % of surgical residents correctly believed that betadine was not used as a hand washing antiseptic solution. less than three quarters of practitioners correctly knew that they had to wash hands before glove use with proportions of practitioners answering correctly ranging from . % (physicians) to . % (surgical residents). only two of nine attitudinal items were answered as ''very much'' by more than % of practitioners (table ). these two items indicating good attitudes related to sp activities do not require effort or much persuasion; the proportion of practitioners washing hands after touching blood, body fluids, excretions and contaminated items ranged from . % to . %, and glove use for touching mucous membranes, proportions ranged from . % to . %. only one sp practice item, hand washing after touching contaminated items, was always practiced by . % to % of practitioners (table ) . a medical resident's knowledge towards sp was related to willingness to be trained ( p = . ) and a surgeon's practice of sp was related only to female gender ( p = . ). no other significant predictive relationships were found. m. askarian et al. adherence to standard precaution guidelines has been problematic for hcws universally. [ ] [ ] [ ] this study was limited by its reliance on self-reporting rather than by observing compliance with sp by practitioners. however, self-reported attitudes towards sp and compliance were low. our poor compliance with many sp practices is not unique to our teaching hospitals, with similar results published in other centers. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] while principles of sp should be strictly observed by surgeons and physicians for their own safety as well as setting leadership roles for their residents, success in the implementation of sp guidelines depends on many factors such as optimal awareness and a positive attitude in all hcws, and these goals are not reached without qualified personnel receiving continuing regular education, as has been repeatedly demonstrated in the literature. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] our study revealed that more than % of all medical practitioners had not received previous sp education, and that more than % were willing to be trained. these findings illustrate that sp practices are not behaviors readily adopted, even by those aware of the sp issue and moderate to low levels of attitudes. a revision of current medical curricula offered in iran may be required that mandates all medical students and hospital trainees attend infection control courses specific to their clinical terms. although all our medical practitioners reported a willingness to be trained, compliance behavior is complex. some barriers to adherence observed internationally include inadequacy of equipment and facilities and difficulties of access to equipment, stressful working conditions, and the belief that practice of sp may interfere with patient care. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] influencing the iranian senior practitioner may require elements of other successful programs knowledge, attitude, and practices related to standard precautions and innovative approaches, such as improved hospital infrastructure that offers an infection 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measures hiv-related knowledge and precautions among michigan nurses a training program in universal precautions for second-year medical students improved compliance with universal precaution in the operating room following an educational intervention compliance with recommended infection control procedures among canadian dentists: results of a national survey the prevalence of and factors related to, compliance with glove utilization among nurses in hospital univeriti sains malaysia testing the reliability and validity of a measure of safety climate compliance with universal precautions: knowledge and behavior of residents and students in a department of obstetrics and gynecology compliance with universal precautions by emergency room nurses at maharaj nakorn chiang mai hospital risk taking by healthcare workers variables influencing worker compliance with universal precautions in the emergency department the use and failure rates of protective equipment to prevent blood and bodily fluid contamination in the obstetric healthcare worker compliance with handwashing and barrier precautions this article is the result of a research project ( - ) approved by the deputy of research of shiraz university of medical sciences and health services. we want to express our special appreciation to the respected research deputy who not only provided financial support, but also showed his interest in solving difficulties.conflict of interest: no competing interest is declared. key: cord- -t yd znu authors: mechessa, desalegn feyissa; ejeta, fikadu; abebe, lemi; henok, andualem; nigussie, tadesse; kebede, oliyad; mamo, yitagesu title: community’s knowledge of covid- and its associated factors in mizan-aman town, southwest ethiopia, date: - - journal: int j gen med doi: . /ijgm.s sha: doc_id: cord_uid: t yd znu background: coronaviruses are a large group of viruses that are common throughout the community. they are associated with mortality, hospitalization, substantial extra costs and lower patient’s quality of life. thus, this study aimed to assess the community’s knowledge of covid- and associated factors in mizan-aman town, southwest ethiopia. methods: community-based cross-sectional study design was conducted among the community of mizan-aman from april to may , . a systematic sampling technique was used to collect data from selected households. data were entered into epi data version . . . and then exported to spss version . for analysis. to identify the predictors of knowledge of covid- , multiple backward logistic regression analysis was used. to show the accuracy of data analysis, % ci was used, and statistical significance was considered at p < . . results: from sampled population, ( . %) of them responded to the questionnaire. of these, ( . %) were male, ( . %) were – years old, and ( . %) were married. the overall correct rate of the knowledge questionnaire was . %. more than % of respondents were well aware of the main clinical symptoms of covid- , its transmission by close contact, its prevention by not going to crowded places and isolation of infected persons. male gender (aor= . , ci: . – . ), age ( – years) (aor= . , ci: . – . ), age ≥ (aor= . , ci: . – . ), lack of formal education (aor= . , ci: . – . ), farmer (aor= . , ci: . – . ), daily laborer (aor= . , ci: . – . ), merchant (aor= . , ci: . – . ), house wife (aor= . , ci: . – . ) were significantly associated with poor knowledge, whereas single marital status was less likely associated with poor knowledge of covid- . conclusion: one-third of the study participants had poor knowledge regarding covid- . male gender, age above thirty-five years, lack of formal education, being farmer, daily laborer, merchant and house wife were significantly associated with poor knowledge. therefore, awareness creation should be given. coronavirus (cov) infections are emerging respiratory viruses and are known to cause illnesses ranging from the common cold to severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars). its clinical presentations are characterized by acute respiratory distress syndrome, septic shock, metabolic acidosis, bleeding and coagulation dysfunction. the previous outbreaks of coronaviruses such as sars-cov and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov) in and showed similarities to the novel coronavirus, which was first reported by chinese authorities in wuhan city, the capital of hubei province in china at the end of december . it is currently the disease resulting in a worldwide outbreak. , the virus is transmitted from humans to human via droplets coughed or exhaled by infected persons, and also by touching droplet-contaminated surfaces or objects and then touching the eyes, nose or mouth. , the most commonly reported clinical symptom in laboratory-confirmed cases is fever, followed by dry cough, fatigue, sputum production, dyspnea, sore throat, headache with myalgia or arthralgia. despite a global health crisis, there is currently no proven prophylaxis for those who have been exposed to covid- and treatment for those who go on to develop covid- . however, many of the symptoms can be treated and getting early care from a healthcare provider can make the disease less dangerous. there are several clinical trials that are being conducted to evaluate potential therapeutics for covid- . , the battle against covid- is still continuing all over the world. the world health organization (who) set strategies to prevent and decline the transmission of covid- such as frequent hand-washing with soap, avoiding close contact, staying home, covering mouth and nose with flexed elbow and maintaining social distancing. to guarantee the final success, people's adherence to these control measures is essential, which is largely affected by their knowledge of covid- . , to facilitate outbreak management of covid- in ethiopia, there is an urgent need to assess the public's awareness of covid- at this critical moment. therefore, this study aimed to assess the knowledge of covid- and its associated factors among the community of mizan-aman town, southwest ethiopia. the findings of this study will help the responsible body organize the necessary interventional programs (education, demonstration) in order to provide up-to-date information to control covid- disease. this study was conducted in mizan-aman town, southwest ethiopia, from april to may , . mizan-aman is a zonal town of the benchi-sheko zone. it is one of the zones in southern nation, nationalities, and people's region. it is kilometers from addis ababa, the capital city of ethiopia, to the southwest direction. mizan-tepi university, mizan-aman college of health science and mizan-aman town health office disseminate health information to the residents face to face while fana fm and debub fm radios were delivering information using their stations. a community-based cross-sectional study was conducted in mizan-aman town to assess the community's knowledge of covid- . all adults of mizan-aman town were the source population and all selected individuals who fulfilled the eligibility criteria were the study population. adults (age≥ years) and who were permanent residents (greater than months) of mizan-aman town were included in the study, whereas adults who were unwilling to respond and houses closed during data collection were excluded from the study. the sample size was determined based on the single population proportion formula: n= [(z α/ ) p ( -p)]/d with the assumption of a % confidence interval (zα/ = . ), marginal error (d) of % and p= % with a % non-response rate, the required total sample size was . systematic random sampling was used to select sample households that represent the entire town. the interval, k, was calculated by dividing total households by . the sample household was selected systematically by jumping every households. the first household was selected by the lottery method. from the selected household, the study participant was chosen by the lottery method if more than one eligible individual present. in this study, the dependent variable was knowledge, whereas independent variables included sex, age, marital status, ethnicity, religion, educational status, occupational status and presence of health professionals in the household. a structured questionnaire was adapted from similar literature, which contains parts. part i includes respondent's background data and part ii includes knowledgerelated questions. the questionnaire was translated into the local language (amharic) by persons who were proficient in both languages. then, the questionnaire was pre-tested on a % of the total sample size in a kite town, which is km away from mizan-aman town, and modified based on the pretest. five experienced bsc public health and two supervisors were recruited and trained for data collection and supervision, respectively. the training was given for two days on how to ensure confidentiality, tool, how to protect themselves and community from infection and interview techniques. additionally, the data collectors and supervisors adhered to the who and ethiopian ministry of health guidelines on covid- prevention. , accordingly, they maintained social distance, worn personal protective equipment and used an alcohol-based hand sanitizer during the data collection period. data were collected through face-to-face interview method. the supervisors and principal investigators supervised the process of data collection on a daily basis. a knowledge questionnaire was developed from different studies. [ ] [ ] [ ] the questionnaire had questions with regarding clinical presentations, regarding transmission routes, and regarding prevention and control of covid- . these questions were answered on a true/false basis with an additional "i don't know" option. a correct answer was assigned point and an incorrect/unknown answer was assigned point. during the analysis, negatively worded items of knowledge (number and ) were reversely scored. the total knowledge score ranged from to , with a higher score denoting a better knowledge of covid- . the cronbach's alpha coefficient of the knowledge questionnaire was calculated to the check internal consistency of the tool, which was . . data quality was assured by careful selection and collection of complete and appropriate data. the clarity and completeness of data collection formats were checked before the actual data collection. data were cleared before entered into epi data manager version . . . . the collected data were processed and retained cautiously in line with its objective. a % sample pretest was performed on randomly selected residents before the beginning of the study. the data on questionnaire were entered into epi data manager version . . . and double entry verification was made. the data were exported to spss version statistical packages for analysis. the data were explored to check for outliers, missing data and assumptions. during analysis, frequencies and percentages were used to describe categorical variables, while means and standard deviations were used to describe continuous variables. bivariate analysis was performed to select variables for multivariate analysis. variables with a p-value < . in the bivariate analysis were taken as candidates for multivariable analysis. finally, a multivariable logistic model was created to predict the determinants of knowledge. p-value less than . was accepted as statistically significant variables. knowledge each correct answer in relation to the knowledge of covid- was given one point. the total knowledge score varied between (with no correct answer) and (for all correct answers), and a cut off level of < was evaluated as poor knowledge, and ≥ indicated good knowledge. ethical clearance was obtained from mizan-tepi university ethics review board. the mizan-aman town administration office was informed about the purpose of the study to get permission. both data collectors and supervisors adhered to the who and ethiopian ministry of health covid- prevention guidelines during data collection. confidentiality of the respondents was secured by excluding respondent's identifiers like name and house number from the data collection format. informed consent was obtained from the respondents before conducting the study. from a total of sampled populations, ( . %) of the study population responded to the questionnaire. the mean age of the study population was . (sd± . ) years. two hundred thirty-three ( . %) were male, ( . %) were married, ( . %) were orthodox and ( . %) were bench in ethnicity. eighteen percent of the participants had health care professionals in their homes (table ) . mixed responses were obtained for knowledge items. the mean covid- knowledge score was . ± . . more than % of respondents were well aware of the main clinical symptoms of covid- , its transmission by close contact, its prevention by not going to crowded places and isolation of infected persons. additionally, . % of the participants responded correctly for not all persons with covid- will develop to severe cases, and ( . %) of them knew as covid- virus spreads via respiratory droplets of infected individuals. furthermore, two-thirds of participants knew that eating or contacting wild animals would result in infection and ordinary residents can wear general medical masks to prevent infection. however, when respondents asked questions related to transmission of covid in the absence of fever in infected persons, the importance of taking measures for infants and young children to prevent the infection and uncommon symptoms of covid compared to common cold, . %, . % and . % of them were unable to identify correct answers, respectively. generally, . % of the population had poor knowledge (table ) . differences in knowledge scores among different demographic characteristics were assessed using t-tests. the results show that knowledge scores were significantly different across age categories, educational status, presence of health professionals in households, occupation status and marital status ( table ). sex (male), age ( - and > years), marital status (single), educational status (no formal education), occupational status (farmer, student, unemployed/housewife) were significantly associated with poor knowledge of covid- (table ). currently, covid- is a global discussion topic in the media and among the public. until now, the outbreak is considered an emergency and the community has an increased risk of infection. however, up to our knowledge, there is no investigation of the community's knowledge of covid- and its associated factors in this study area. the findings in our study showed that the overall correct rate of the knowledge questionnaire was . %. this is lower than the study done in china where the overall correct rate of the knowledge questionnaire was %. this discrepancy might be due to the difference in technology access and educational level between the study populations. in general, in our study, . % of participants had poor knowledge about the disease, its mode of transmission, prevention and control. in this study, . % of the respondents knew that the main clinical symptoms of covid- were fever, fatigue, dry cough, and myalgia and . % of them knew as currently, there is no effective cure for covid- , but early symptomatic and supportive treatment can help most patients recover from the infection. this is similar to the finding reported by kebede et al where % of the respondents knew that the main clinical symptoms of covid- are fever, fatigue, dry cough, and myalgia and . % of respondents knew that currently, there is no effective cure for covid- , but early symptomatic multiple logistic regression analysis of this finding showed that being male was significantly associated with poor knowledge of covid- as compared to females. this is similar to a study done in china and saudi arabia, where male was significantly associated with low knowledge scores. , in our finding age above years was significantly associated with poor knowledge. this is in agreement with the study done in egypt, where respondents' age older than years were significantly associated with poor knowledge. however, this is in contrast to a study done in china where age above years was associated with good knowledge. lack of formal education was significantly associated with poor knowledge. this is similar to a previous study. the possible justification might be formal education providing basic infectious disease (such as the sars-cov) concept, mode of transmission and prevention. in this study, being unemployed was significantly associated with poor knowledge of covid- . this is in agreement with a previous report finding. in addition to this being farmer, daily laborer and merchants were significantly associated with poor knowledge of covid- . however, being single in marital status was less likely associated with poor knowledge. similarly, other previous study also demonstrated that being unmarried was associated with good knowledge. the possible reason might be that unmarried persons have less social and family responsibility, which reduces psychosocial burden, which in turn increases their knowledge. one-third of the respondents had poor knowledge of the covid- concept, transmission, prevention and control. being male, age above years, lack of formal education, being farmer, daily laborer, merchant and unemployed/ house wife were significantly associated with poor knowledge, whereas being single was less likely associated with poor knowledge of covid- . syndrome; sars, severe acute respiratory syndrome; who, world health organization. all relevant data are within the paper. the international journal of general medicine is an international, peer-reviewed open-access journal that focuses on general and internal medicine, pathogenesis, epidemiology, diagnosis, monitoring and treatment protocols. the journal is characterized by the rapid reporting of reviews, original research and clinical studies across all disease areas. the manuscript management system is completely online and includes a very quick and fair peer-review system, which is all easy to use. visit http://www.dovepress.com/ testimonials.php to read real quotes from published authors. submit your manuscript here: https://www.dovepress.com/international-journal-of-general-medicine-journal sars and other coronaviruses as causes of pneumonia novel coronavirus pneumonia emergency response epidemiology team. the epidemiological characteristics of an outbreak of novel coronavirus diseases (covid- ) in china the neuroinvasive potential of sars-cov may play a role in the respiratory failure of covid- patients public responses to the novel coronavirus ( -ncov) in japan: mental health consequences and target populations european centre for disease prevention and control. factsheet for health professionals on coronaviruses european centre for disease prevention and control. event background covid- report of the who-china joint mission on coronavirus disease (covid- ). available from coronavirus covid- global cases by the center for systems science and engineering at johns hopkins key-messages-and-actions-for-covid- -prevention-and-control-in -schools-march- .pdf?sfvrsn=baf d _. accessed covid- ) situation report coronavirus disease (covid- ). available from who director-general's opening remarks at the mission briefing on covid- who infection prevention and control guidance -(covid- ) ethiopian fedral ministry of health. national comprehensive covid management handbook knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards covid- among chinese residents during the rapid rise period of the covid- outbreak: a quick online cross-sectional survey knowledge, perceptions, and attitude of egyptians towards the novel disease (covid- ) knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards covid- among nepalese residents: a quick online cross-sectional survey knowledge, perceptions and preventive practices towards covid- early in the outbreak among jimma university medical center visitors, southwest ethiopia mers-cov infection: mind the public knowledge gap knowledge, attitude, and preventive practices toward covid- among bangladeshi internet users we are also extended our gratitude to all individuals who were involved in data collection and also the participants who genuinely provided us with all necessary information. all authors made substantial contributions to the conception and design, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation of data, took part in revising the article, gave final approval of the version to be published and agreed to be accountable for all parts of the work. not funded by any organization. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- -gljfslhs authors: al-hanawi, mohammed k.; angawi, khadijah; alshareef, noor; qattan, ameerah m. n.; helmy, hoda z.; abudawood, yasmin; alqurashi, mohammed; kattan, waleed m.; kadasah, nasser akeil; chirwa, gowokani chijere; alsharqi, omar title: knowledge, attitude and practice toward covid- among the public in the kingdom of saudi arabia: a cross-sectional study date: - - journal: front public health doi: . /fpubh. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gljfslhs background: saudi arabia has taken unprecedented and stringent preventive and precautionary measures against covid- to control its spread, safeguard citizens and ensure their well-being. public adherence to preventive measures is influenced by their knowledge and attitude toward covid- . this study investigated the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of the saudi public, toward covid- , during the pandemic. methods: this is a cross-sectional study, using data collected via an online self-reported questionnaire, from , participants. to assess the differences in mean scores, and identify factors associated with knowledge, attitudes, and practices toward covid- , the data were run through univariate and multivariable regression analyses, respectively. results: the majority of the study participants were knowledgeable about covid- . the mean covid- knowledge score was . (sd = . , range: – ), indicating a high level of knowledge. the mean score for attitude was . (sd = . , range: – ), indicating optimistic attitudes. the mean score for practices was . (sd = . , range: – ), indicating good practices. however, the results showed that men have less knowledge, less optimistic attitudes, and less good practice toward covid- , than women. we also found that older adults are likely to have better knowledge and practices, than younger people. conclusions: our finding suggests that targeted health education interventions should be directed to this particular vulnerable population, who may be at increased risk of contracting covid- . for example, covid- knowledge may increase significantly if health education programs are specifically targeted at men. coronavirus disease is defined as an illness caused by a novel coronavirus, now called severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ; formerly called -ncov). covid- is an emerging respiratory infection that was first discovered in december , in wuhan city, hubei province, china ( ) . sars-cov- belongs to the larger family of ribonucleic acid (rna) viruses, leading to infections, from the common cold, to more serious diseases, such as middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars-cov) ( ) . the main symptoms of covid- have been identified as fever, dry cough, fatigue, myalgia, shortness of breath, and dyspnoea ( , ) . covid- is characterized by rapid transmission, and can occur by close contact with an infected person ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the details on the disease are evolving. as such, this may not be the only way the transmission is occurring. covid- has spread widely and rapidly, from wuhan city, to other parts of the world, threatening the lives of many people ( ) . by the end of january , the world health organization (who) announced a public health emergency of international concern and called for the collaborative effort of all countries, to prevent its rapid spread. later, the who declared covid- a "global pandemic" ( ) . following the who declaration, countries around the globe, including the kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa), have been leaning on response plans to respond to the pandemic and contain the virus. following the confirmation of its first case of covid- , on monday march , the saudi government has been vigilantly monitoring the situation and developing countryspecific measures that are in line with the who guidelines in dealing with the outbreak ( ) . these includes suspending all inbounds and outbounds flights, closing all malls and shops in the country, except pharmacies and grocery stores, and closing down schools and universities. umrah visas have been suspended, as have prayers at mosques, including the two holy mosques in mekkah and almadina. on march , the government imposed a nationwide curfew to restrict people movements for most of the day hours. despite the unprecedented national measures in combating the outbreak, the success or failure of these efforts is largely dependent on public behavior. specifically, public adherence to preventive measures established by the government is of prime importance to prevent the spread of the disease. adherence is likely to be influenced by the public's knowledge and attitudes toward covid- . evidence shows that public knowledge is important in tackling pandemics ( , ) . by assessing public awareness and knowledge about the coronavirus, deeper insights into existing public perception and practices can be gained, thereby helping to identify attributes that influence the public in adopting healthy practices and responsive behavior ( ) . assessing public knowledge is also important in identifying gaps and strengthening ongoing prevention efforts. thus, this study aims to investigate the knowledge, attitudes and practices (kap) of ksa residents, toward covid- during the pandemic spike. to the researchers' knowledge, this is the first study to investigate covid- kap, and associated sociodemographic characteristics among the general population of the ksa. the findings of this study are expected to provide useful information to policymakers, about kap among the saudi population, at this critical time. the findings may also inform public health officials on further public health interventions, awareness, and policy improvements pertaining to the covid- outbreak. this cross-sectional study was conducted among the general population of saudi arabia, from march , to march . given the social distancing (physical distancing) measures and restricted movement and lockdowns, data were collected online, via a self-reported questionnaire, using surveymonkey. given the high internet usage among people in the ksa, a link to the survey was distributed to respondents, via twitter and whatsapp groups. the link was also posted on the king abdulaziz university website. the larger the target sample size, the higher the external validity and the greater the generalizability of the study ( ) . this study aimed to maximize reach and gather data from as many respondents as possible. according to the latest ksa census, saudi arabia has a population of , , ( ) . the representative target sample size needed, to achieve the study objectives and sufficient statistical power, was calculated with a sample size calculator ( ) . the sample size calculator arrived at , participants, using a margin of error of ± %, a confidence level of %, a % response distribution, and , , people. the self-reported questionnaire was developed by the authors, according to guidelines for the community of covid- , by the centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) ( ) . the questionnaire was conducted in arabic language. it was initially drafted in english by h.z.h., and y.a., and was translated from english to arabic by m.k.a and m.a. the questionnaire was translated then back to english by n.a and w.k to ensure the meaning of the content. on the first page of the online questionnaire, respondents were clearly informed about the background and objectives of the study. respondents were informed that they were free to withdraw at any time, without giving a reason, and that all information and opinions provided would be anonymous and confidential. respondents living in saudi arabia, aged years or older, understand the content of the questionnaire, and agree to participate in the study were instructed to complete the questionnaire. online informed consent were obtained before proceeding with the questionnaire. the questionnaire consisted of four primary sections. the first section gathered information on respondents' sociodemographic characteristics, including age, gender, marital status, education level, work status, region of residence, and income level. the second section assessed participants' knowledge of covid- . this section included items on modes of transmission, clinical symptoms, treatment, risk groups, isolation, prevention and control. the third section assessed participants' attitudes toward covid- , using a five-point likert scale. for each of six statements, respondents were asked to state their level of agreement, from "strongly disagree, " "disagree, " "undecided, " "agree, " or "strongly agree." the final section of the questionnaire assessed the respondents' practices. this section consisted of five questions related to practices and behavior, including (a) going to social events with large numbers of people, (b) going to crowded places, (c) avoiding cultural behaviors, such as shaking hands (d) practicing social distancing, (e) washing hands after sneezing, coughing, nose-blowing, and, recently, being in a public place. for sociodemographic variables, gender was coded as one for men, and zero for women. the age variable was divided into categories: - (reference category), - , - , - , and ≥ . marital status was captured as binary, and a value of one was used for marriage and zero for otherwise. education was categorized into high school or below (reference category), college/university degree, and postgraduate degree. work status was broken down into government employee (reference category), non-government employee, retiree, selfemployed, and unemployed. monthly income (saudi riyal, sr = usd . ) was divided into eight categories: