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Journal Article

Citation

Shukla S, Mishra SK, Agustino RD. Qual. Health Res. 2022; 32(13): 1993-2005.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/10497323221129260

PMID

36177963

PMCID

PMC9527149

Abstract

COVID-19 is an infectious disease that has widened the gap between victims and non-victims in society. Understanding how individuals support and assist COVID-19 sufferers in a pandemic crisis is critical. Thus, this study aims to qualitatively evaluate the prosocial intention and types of prosocial behavior toward COVID-19 victims by low socioeconomic individuals from India and Indonesia's collectivistic societies. We conducted semi-structured and in-depth interviews during the lockdown from March to May 2020, via phone and in-person, using a purposive selection of respondents (total n = 50). The data were analyzed using the qualitative synthesis method. Five themes were discovered: 1) too scared to help, 2) love to help but scared: moral dilemma, 3) informing authority who knows how to handle, 4) caring, sharing, and supporting, but with a distance, and 5) helping at one's personal health risk. This study highlights that prosocial intentions range from minor acts of kindness to self-harm and out-of-bounds acts of kindness for COVID-19 victims.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; COVID-19; Social Behavior; *COVID-19; Communicable Disease Control; *Altruism; collectivistic society; Indonesia/epidemiology; low socioeconomic; prosocial intention

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