key: cord-0839236-kk85aa8u authors: Kwok, Kin On; Li, Kin Kit; Tang, Arthur; Tsoi, Margaret Ting Fong; Chan, Emily Ying Yang; Tang, Julian Wei Tze; Wong, Angel; Wei, Wan In; Wong, Samuel Yeung Shan title: Psychobehavioral Responses and Likelihood of Receiving COVID-19 Vaccines during the Pandemic, Hong Kong date: 2021-07-03 journal: Emerg Infect Dis DOI: 10.3201/eid2707.210054 sha: 585a69e0c563efe6535cff2206ec40d7eb9bfc72 doc_id: 839236 cord_uid: kk85aa8u To access temporal changes in psychobehavioral responses to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, we conducted a 5-round (R1–R5) longitudinal population-based online survey in Hong Kong during January–September 2020. Most respondents reported wearing masks (R1 99.0% to R5 99.8%) and performing hand hygiene (R1 95.8% to R5 97.7%). Perceived COVID-19 severity decreased significantly, from 97.4% (R1) to 77.2% (R5), but perceived self-susceptibility remained high (87.2%–92.8%). Female sex and anxiety were associated with greater adoption of social distancing. Intention to receive COVID-19 vaccines decreased significantly (R4 48.7% to R5 37.6%). Greater anxiety, confidence in vaccine, and collective responsibility and weaker complacency were associated with higher tendency to receive COVID-19 vaccines. Although its generalizability should be assumed with caution, this study helps to formulate health communication strategies and foretells the initial low uptake rate of COVID-19 vaccines, suggesting that social distancing should be maintained in the medium term. To access temporal changes in psychobehavioral responses to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, we conducted a 5-round (R1-R5) longitudinal populationbased online survey in Hong Kong during January-September 2020. Most respondents reported wearing masks (R1 99.0% to R5 99.8%) and performing hand hygiene (R1 95.8% to R5 97.7%). Perceived COVID-19 severity decreased signifi cantly, from 97.4% (R1) to 77.2% (R5), but perceived self-susceptibility remained high (87.2%-92.8%). Female sex and anxiety were associated with greater adoption of social distancing. Intention to receive COVID-19 vaccines decreased signifi cantly (R4 48.7% to R5 37.6%). Greater anxiety, confi dence in vaccine, and collective responsibility and weaker complacency were associated with higher tendency to receive COVID- 19 vaccines. Although its generalizability should be assumed with caution, this study helps to formulate health communication strategies and foretells the initial low uptake rate of COVID-19 vaccines, suggesting that social distancing should be maintained in the medium term. on their psychological, behavioral, and vaccine-related responses, conducted during the first 2 waves of the COVID-19 epidemic. Our main objectives were tracking major psychobehavioral responses (including risk perception, psychological distress, and adoption of precautionary measures) over time and examining the determinants of the intention to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. As a complement, other psychobehavioral responses (such as knowledge about were also reported. These findings should have major implications for infection control policies and targeted mental health recommendations. Hong Kong has a high-income economy but had major social unrest in the prepandemic period in the population (14) ; thus, the experience in Hong Kong may act as a reference for other similar populations to prepare for future epidemics. We established a community cohort within 36 hours after the first COVID-19 confirmed case was identified in Hong Kong. District councilors shared an online survey link through channels in which they convey information to their targeted residents (8) . We arranged 5 follow-up rounds (denoted as R1-R5) of online surveys of the community cohort during January-September 2020, each lasting for 3-6 weeks: R1, January 23-February 13; R2, March 6-April 14; R3, May 8-June 14; R4, July 15-August 7; and R5, August 8-September 15. Respondents were compensated with cash vouchers in Hong Kong dollars (HKD): HKD 10 for R1, HKD 20 for R2, and HKD 30 for R3-R5. The study instrument was based on a questionnaire used during the initial phase of the COVID-19 epidemic in Hong Kong (8) . In each round, we administered questions soliciting key information on demographics, health conditions, travel history, risk perceptions toward COVID-19, anxiety and burnout, confidence in the local government and doctors, knowledge about COVID-19 transmission, and adoption and perceived effectiveness of preventive measures. In response to the funding commitments for COVID-19 vaccine development (15) , starting with R4, we embedded vaccine-related questions along 2 dimensions: intention to receive COVID-19 vaccines when available and vaccine hesitancy. Risk perceptions toward COVID-19 included perceived susceptibility (of oneself and one's family members), assuming no precautionary measure, and perceived severity. Starting with R3, we asked respondents to report their perceived susceptibility based on the situation during which they completed the survey (1, very likely; 5, very unlikely). In addition, respondents rated the level of disease severity of COVID-19 and other noncommunicable diseases and infectious diseases (1, very bad; 5, not bad at all). We measured anxiety with the Chinese-Cantonese version of the Hospital, Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety (16) . Respondents rated 7 statements on the basis of their feelings in the preceding 7 days on a 4-point scale; a higher score indicated stronger anxiety (summative score: 0-7, normal; 8-10, borderline abnormal; 11-21, abnormal). We measured burnout with a single-item measure: "Overall, based on your definition of burnout, how would you rate your level of burnout when facing COVID-19?" (1, "I have no symptoms of burnout"; 5, "I feel completely burned out and often wonder if I can go on facing COVID-19; I am at the point where I may need some changes or may need to seek some sort of help"). This single-item measure was refined from a nonproprietary validated burnout measure (17) to fit the current context and was asked starting with R3. Respondents rated the adoption (yes/no) (Appendix Table 1 , https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/EID/ article/27/7/21-0054-App1.pdf) and perceived effectiveness (1, very effective; 5, not very effective) (Appendix Table 2 ) of 17 precautionary measures against COVID-19. For the likelihood of COVID-19 vaccine uptake, respondents answered this question "If COVID-19 vaccines are available, how likely will you receive them?" (0, definitely not; 10, definitely). We measured vaccine hesitancy with a validated 15item tool (18) with 3 items on each of 5 psychological antecedents (the 5Cs): confidence, defined as trust in the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine, the system that delivers the vaccine, and the motivations of policymakers who decide on the need of the vaccine; complacency, defined as not perceiving the disease as high risk and vaccination as necessary; constraints, defined as barriers to vaccination; calculation, defined as persons' engagement in extensive information searching; and collective responsibility, defined as willingness to protect others through herd immunity. We used an average score for each antecedent. For collective responsibility, one reverse item, "When everyone is vaccinated, I don't have to get vaccinated, too," was excluded from the calculation. The vaccine-related items did not include any specific information about pharmaceutical companies or manufacturing countries. We summarized responses using descriptive statistics. To examine the overall linear trends in the responses and to account for the correlation diminishment resulting from responses from the same respondents across time, we adopted the generalized estimation equation framework featuring an autoregressive structure for within-subject correlations. To compare the proportion of responses in 2 time points, we used a partially overlapping samples z-test (19) . We adopted a multivariate regression model under the generalized estimation equation framework to identify the associated factors for higher tendency for social distancing (i.e., >5 social distancing measures) and higher uptake tendency for COVID-19 vaccines (i.e., >7 of 10 for the "likelihood of receiving COVID-19 vaccines" question). We reported adjusted odds ratios (aORs) and 95% CIs and specified a statistical significance of p<0.05. We conducted the analysis in R software version 4.0.3 (https:// www.r-project.org). This study was approved by the Survey Behavioral Research Ethics Committee of The Chinese University of Hong Kong (reference no. SBRE-20-037). The 5 study rounds intertwined epidemic waves 1 and 2 in Hong Kong (20) at different disease stages ( Figure 1 ): the initial phase (R1), amid epidemic waves (R2 and R4), during the relative quiescence between 2 waves (R3), and the decaying phase of wave 2 (R5). The government-initiated interventions (such as school closure and compulsory mask-wearing) and the call for COVID-19 vaccine were also presented ( Figure 1 ). The data collection was completed before any announcement of the safety and efficacy trials of the candidate vaccines. We received 2,478 attempts to complete the survey in R1, of which 1,715 provided complete responses (8) and 1,054 indicated willingness to participate in future studies. The sample sizes for R2-R5 ranged from 441 to 644 ( Figure 2 ). The cohort consisted of more female persons (68.5%-69.8%) and young adults (18-44 years of age) (78.6%-81.0%) than other categories. Most were well educated: 78.9%-82.5% had at least postsecondary level education (Appendix Table 3 ). Most respondents were free from chronic diseases (87.1%-88.8%) and perceived themselves to be in good health (73.1%-78.1%) (Appendix Table 4 ). We identified significant temporal variation of risk perception toward COVID-19 (Appendix Table 5 ). Assuming no precaution measures, respondents perceived themselves likely to be infected with CO-VID-19 (87.2%-92.8%). This proportion dropped to 19.3%-42.0% when the current situations were considered, when institutionalized interventions were in place and personal protective measures were conducted en masse (Appendix Table 1 ). Perceived severity decreased significantly (p<0.001) over the study period, from 97.4% (R1) of respondents considering COVID-19 to be serious to 77.2% (R5). The perceived chance of having CO-VID-19 cured increased significantly (p<0.001) by more than 3-fold, from 16.6% (R1) to 57.2% (R5). An increasing time trend (p<0.001) was also observed for perceived survival chance if infected, from 18.6% (R1) to 67.2% (R5). The mean Hospital, Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety score remained borderline abnormal throughout the study, ranging from 8.99 (R1) to 7.61 (R5). There was a substantial increase in the proportion of normal respondents in terms of anxiety (p<0.001), from 35.6% (R1) to 51.7% (R5) (Appendix Table 6 ). This anxiety metric echoed the significant drop in the frequency of thinking about COVID-19 (p<0.001), from 76.2% (R1) to 48.6% (R5). Despite this ease in anxiety level, the proportion of respondents worrying specifically about COVID-19 (85.7%-96.8%) and having their daily lives affected a lot by COV-ID-19 (45.7%-61.8%) remained high throughout the study (Appendix Table 6 ). Meanwhile, ≈40% of the respondents have shown symptoms of burnout toward COVID-19 since R3. The adoption of individual precautionary measures remained high throughout the study (Appendix Table 1 ). Most respondents reported they wore masks (R1, 99.0%; R5, 99.8%), covered mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing (R1, 96.9%; R5, 98.4%), performed hand hygiene using hand sanitizer or alcohol gel (R1, 95.8%; R5, 97.7%), and disinfected their homes (R1, 78.6%; R5, 88.5%). Hand hygiene and Psychobehavioral Responses to COVID-19 Vaccines home disinfection measures showed a significant increasing trend across time. The adoptions of social distancing across rounds were consistently from moderate to high (Appendix Table 1 ). About one third of respondents avoided public transportation (R1, 38.0% to R5, 35.6%; p = 0.11) and work (R1, 24.6% to R5, 35.4%; p<0.001) across waves. Upward significant trends were observed among respondents in avoiding social activities (R1, 63.8% to R5, 85.7%; p<0.001) and contacting with persons with fever or symptoms of respiratory diseases (R1, 92.9% to R5, 95.1%; p<0.05). Factors associated with greater adoption of social-distancing were being female (aOR 1.30, 95% CI 1.09-1.56); living in the New Territories, a suburb of Hong Kong (aOR for the 2 territories 1.40-1.42); and being anxious (aOR 1.47, 95% CI 1.23-1.76) (Appendix Table 7 ). Respondents with chronic conditions (aOR 0.72, 95% CI 0.54-0.95) and those reporting having neutral understanding of COVID-19, compared with those who said they understood COVID-19 not well/ not well at all (aOR 0.73, 95% CI 0.62-0.85), were less likely to practice social distancing (Appendix Table 7 ). Respondents' intention to receive COVID-19 vaccine decreased significantly from R4 (48.7%, 95% CI 44.0-53.4) to R5 (37.6%, 95% CI 32.9-42.4), with particularly low rates among persons >55 years of age (Appendix Table 8 Table 8 ). We also researched the trends of other psychobehavioral responses. We compiled responses for comparing perceived severity across diseases (Appendix, Appendix Table 9 ), confidence in government and doctors (Appendix, Appendix Table 10 ), knowledge of COVID-19 (Appendix, Appendix Table 11 ), and perceived effectiveness of precautionary measures (Appendix, Appendix Table 2 ). Our 5-round longitudinal online survey analyzed the temporal changes in community responses throughout the first 2 COVID-19 epidemics in Hong Kong. Overall, perceived susceptibility (assuming no precautionary measure taken) remained high: self-susceptibility (87.2%-92.8%) was substantially higher than that observed for the 2003 SARS epidemic (23.0%) (21) and the 2009 influenza pandemic (58.1%) (22) in the same population. However, in terms of perceived severity, the proportions dropped dramatically across time but were still higher than those observed in other highly affected locations (United Kingdom, 20.7% [12] ; Kerala state, India, 55.7% [23] ). The proportions of persons with an abnormal level of anxiety also dropped over the study period, from 34.3% to 22.0%. We observed consistently high levels of precautionary measures, such as mask wearing, hand hygiene, and home disinfection throughout the study period. Greater anxiety was associated with higher tendency of social distancing. The projected COVID-19 vaccine uptake rate dropped from 48.7% (R4) to 37.6% (R5). Greater anxiety, confidence in the vaccine, and collective responsibility and lower complacency contributed to a greater likelihood of intended vaccination. Our results have 5 immediate public health implications. First, with the uncertain disease progression (e.g., emergence of new variants of coronavirus) and the changing institutionalized interventions, there should be continual monitoring of risk perception toward COVID-19 in the community. Risk perception is an indispensable determinant of behavioral change (24) and depends on the prevalence of the health risk concerned (25) . Our findings show varying risk perception over time during the pandemic, illustrating a perceived severity of COVID-19 that significantly decreased over time. Inferring from the large difference between naive (assuming no precautionary measures) and current (based on the current situation) scenarios, perceived susceptibility is sensitive to the disease progression and interventions in place. To qualify for the survey, participants had to be >18 years of age and reside in Hong Kong for >5 days/week in the preceding month. The numbers in the box for each round refer to the number of respondents who indicated willingness to participate in the respective survey round; they may or may not have completed the questionnaire. Although such temporal trend of risk perception was also observed in past pandemics (26) , the absolute level of risk perception was not. Second, surveillance and encouragement of social distancing should be maintained in the medium to long term, given the low projected uptake rate of COVID-19 vaccine. In Hong Kong, the reproductive number peaked at 2.39 in wave 1 and 3.04 in wave 2 (20) , which (based on early data) corresponded approximately to requiring 56.1%-66.9% of the population to be immune to confer herd immunity (27) . Because the projected vaccine uptake rates (R4, 48.7%; R5, 37.6%) fell short of the required level, relatively small-scale upcoming epidemics compared with the previous waves are expected. With more persons being vaccinated, there might be more social interactions, so persons should be encouraged to maintain social distancing (such as avoiding unnecessary gatherings). Meanwhile, further research should focus on disease transmission during a mix of social distancing in place and vaccine hesitancy in the population. Third, risk communications in Hong Kong should target complacency, vaccine confidence, and collective responsibility to boost the COVID-19 vaccine uptake. We reported a low intention for uptake of the would-be vaccines, which declined over time in Hong Kong. A similar situation was observed in the United States, where the projected vaccine uptake rate dropped from 74.1% in April 2020 to 56.2% in December 2020 (28) . Such low uptake intention among older persons in our study (R4, 29.4%; R5, 31.4%) is particularly worrisome because older age is a risk factor for death from COVID-19 (29) . The extent to which our findings on the predictors of uptake intention can be generalized to other countries or regions requires further investigation. Unique to Hong Kong were the low COVID-19 infection rate and low level of confidence in government measures. The weak uptake intention reported in this study was uncommon compared with other countries (71.5% overall for 19 countries) (30) . The low infection rate, along with the decreasing perceived severity toward COVID-19, might weaken the urgency for vaccination, which may also apply to places such as Taiwan, Japan, and Australia. However, the social unrest in Hong Kong in late 2019 might have led to distrust in the government (31) , which could subsequently lower vaccination intention (32) and trigger maintenance of personal precautionary measures. One possible explanation is that, when moderated by distrust in government, persons tend to rely on personal protective measures (such as wearing facemasks and maintaining social distancing) but become skeptical to institutional protective measures (such as vaccines). Distrust in governments during the pandemic may also influence vaccine hesitancy in other regions, such as Brazil and Poland (33) . Nevertheless, given the projected low vaccine uptake rate in this study, it may be insufficient to reach herd immunity in the near future, if ever, in Hong Kong. Therefore, taking the vaccine or not may have little bearing on relaxing government interventions in the medium term. In addition, from findings in other regions, trust in the government itself (34) and the information provided by the government (30) increased preventive practices, specifically accepting vaccines, during pandemics (30) . Therefore, effective health communication is particularly crucial for the Hong Kong government. To rebuild trust, public health authorities need to possess competence, objectivity, fairness, consistency, transparency, sincerity, and faith (35) . In addition, organizations aside from government and healthcare providers, such as professional bodies and religious groups, may help deliver pro-vaccine messages (36) . Fourth, our results help to prioritize the content in promotional messaging. It is worth investing resources on promotional messaging, particularly when few respondents in R4 (overall, 16.7%; 18-24 y, 24.7%; 25-34 y, 14.5%; 35-44 y, 15.5%; 45-54 y, 11.5%; >55 y, 17.6%) and R5 (overall, 10.5%; 18-24 y, 12.8%; 25-34 y, 7.4%; 35-44 y, 12.1%; 45-54 y, 6.1%; >55 y, 20.0%) indicated an absolute "yes" for receiving COVID-19 vaccines (measured on a 11-point Likert scale) and when there was antibody waning after receiving the vaccine. The decreasing confidence metric from R4 to R5 highlighted the need to build trust among the public toward the logistics of vaccine development, licensing, generating recommendations, and distribution (37) . Before the government authorizes the use of a COVID-19 vaccine, establishment of an advisory panel will help determine factors that the government should consider, such as performance (safety, efficacy, and effectiveness) and characteristics (number of doses, formulation, and presentation and packaging) of the available vaccine (38) . Moreover, to increase the collective responsibility and perceived vaccine necessity, the government should foster understanding of the vaccine among the public with transparent communication, including more engagement with different stakeholders in the community and populations who are disproportionately affected by the pandemic to listen to their concerns. Leveraging knowledge, skills, and expertise from these communications will provide a robust assessment to underpin the vaccination campaign. Although calculations and constraints in the 5Cs model were not associated with the vaccine uptake likelihood at this stage, continuous examination in these 2 constructs will help refine future vaccination campaigns to engage citizens in cost-benefit calculations and increase their vaccine availability, affordability and accessibility. Fifth, the psychological distress arising from burnout should be weighed together with the wellestablished anxiety. This pandemic is ongoing and has lasted much longer than the SARS epidemic, so more persons are developing syndromes of emotional exhaustion. The interplay between 2 psychological distresses, burnout and anxiety, is worth investigating during the ongoing pandemic. Our study showed that almost half of respondents had burnout symptoms in a short 4-month window from June through September 2020. This symptom did not contribute to the likelihood of COVID-19 vaccination in the last 2-point survey. However, the current general measure of burnout was not able to pinpoint the sources of burnout, such as financial stress, social isolation, the disease itself, or their combinations, for a detailed analysis. Nevertheless, the burnout phenomenon among persons coping with a long-term pandemic (39) suggests the need to reexamine the temporal association among social-distancing adoption, vaccination, and burnout. Our study's first limitation is that the survey may have been subject to recall and social conformity biases, but its longitudinal design enabled us to track the same respondents over time, reducing self-control bias. Second, caution should be exercised when generalizing our findings to other regions because Hong Kong was exposed to other disease outbreaks recently, such as 1997 avian influenza (40), 2003 SARS (41) , and 2009 pandemic influenza (42) . Nevertheless, our COVID-19 experience after those past outbreaks may be precedent to other countries, after the current CO-VID-19 pandemic. Third, our survey was conducted before the safety and efficacy data of the COVID-19 vaccines were released. The actual uptake rates might be affected by possible vaccination side effects events, such as the recent reported deaths after taking the vaccines in Hong Kong (43) (44) (45) . In conclusion, our findings highlight the importance of continuous longitudinal assessment of community psychobehavioral responses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Monitoring those responses can help public health authorities tailor health communication strategies to achieve the desired behavioral outcomes (vaccination and adoption of precautionary measures) to control future epidemic waves. Psychobehavioral Responses to COVID-19 Vaccines Archived: WHO timeline-COVID-19 World Health Organization. WHO coronavirus disease (COVID-19) dashboard Temporal variation of human encounters and the number of locations in which they occur: a longitudinal study of Hong Kong residents Novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) cases in Hong Kong and implications for further spread Epidemiology, clinical spectrum, viral kinetics and impact of COVID-19 in the Asia-Pacific region Centre for Health Protection. Countries/areas with reported cases of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) World Health Organization. Draft landscape and tracker of COVID-19 candidate vaccines Community responses during early phase of COVID-19 epidemic, Hong Kong COVID-19 preventive behaviours among people with anxiety and depressive symptoms: findings from Japan Implications of public understanding of COVID-19 in Saudi Arabia for fostering effective communication through awareness framework. Front Public Health risk perception and media in shaping protective behaviors: insights from the early phase of COVID-19 Italian outbreak Comparing public perceptions and preventive behaviors during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom: cross-sectional survey study COVID-19 and vaccine hesitancy: a challenge the United States must overcome Depression and post-traumatic stress during major social unrest in Hong Kong: a 10-year prospective cohort study Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations. $2 billion required to develop a vaccine against the COVID-19 virus Validation of the Chinese-Cantonese version of the hospital anxiety and depression scale and comparison with the Hamilton Rating Scale of Depression Using a single item to measure burnout in primary care staff: a psychometric evaluation Beyond confidence: development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination Test statistics for comparing two proportions with partially overlapping samples Evolving epidemiological characteristics of COVID-19 in Hong Kong from A tale of two cities: community psychobehavioral surveillance and related impact on outbreak control in Hong Kong and Singapore during the severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemic risk perceptions, and preventive precautions among Hong Kong students during the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic Public perception and preparedness for the pandemic COVID 19: A Health Belief Model approach The concept of risk perception in health-related behavior theory and behavior change Parsing susceptibility and severity dimensions of health risk perceptions Population responses during the pandemic phase of the influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 epidemic Herd immunity-estimating the level required to halt the COVID-19 epidemics in affected countries National trends in the US public's likelihood of getting a COVID-19 vaccine Clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: a retrospective cohort study A global survey of potential acceptance of a COVID-19 vaccine Are high-performing health systems resilient against the COVID-19 epidemic? Lower trust in national government links to no history of vaccination COVID-SCORE: A global survey to assess public perceptions of government responses to COVID-19 (COVID-SCORE-10) The relationship between government trust and preventive behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic in China: exploring the roles of knowledge and negative emotion World Health Organization Europe. Vaccination and trust Hurdles to herd immunity: distrust of government and vaccine refusal in the US Building trust to achieve confidence in COVID-19 vaccines World Health Organization. Principles and considerations for adding a vaccine to a national immunization programme Impact of social distancing on mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: an urgent discussion Outbreak of avian infl uenza A(H5N1) virus infection in Hong Kong in 1997 The SARS epidemic in Hong Kong: what lessons have we learned? Early real-time estimation of the basic reproduction number of emerging or reemerging infectious diseases in a community with heterogeneous contact pattern: using data from Hong Kong 2009 H1N1 pandemic infl uenza as an illustrative example Two more deaths, another nine temporary facial paralysis cases after Covid vaccinations Coronavirus: chronically ill Hongkonger dies days after getting BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine, while experts push for return of international travel Another man died after receiving Sinovac vaccine Another-mandied-after-receiving-Sinovac-vaccine Address for correspondence: Kin On Kwok, Rm 419, 4/F, JC School of Public Health and Primary Care Building, Prince of Wales Hospital COVID-19: time to exonerate the pangolin from the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 to humans Animal source of the coronavirus continues to elude scientists Knowledge and attitudes about the use of pangolin scale products in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) We thank Henry Chan Dr. Kwok is an assistant professor affiliated with the JC School of Public Health and Primary Care at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China. His primary research interests include infectious disease epidemiology and infection control, with a current focus on mitigating emerging infectious disease outbreaks from the mathematic, epidemiologic, and behavioral perspectives. Linnaeus named the genus Manis, derived from manes, Latin for "spirits" or "ghosts or shades of the dead," which refers to their noncuddly reptilian persona and solitary nocturnal foraging. Covered by keratin scales, pangolins, when threatened, assume a rolled up position, described by the Malayan word pengguling (one who rolls up). Native to Java (thus javanica), their habitat includes Southeast Asia, especially the Indomalayan archipelago and Sunda Islands. Humans hunt pangolins for their meat, consume their blood as an elixir, and use their scales and other body parts as ingredients for crafting leather products and noneffi cacious medications.