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. 2023 Aug 24;18(8):e0290107.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290107. eCollection 2023.

Religious diversity and public health: Lessons from COVID-19

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Religious diversity and public health: Lessons from COVID-19

Lea Taragin-Zeller et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Scholars have identified a range of variables that predict public health compliance during COVID-19, including: psychological, institutional and situational variables as well as demographic characteristics, such as gender, location and age. In this paper, we argue that religious affiliation is also a clear predictor for compliance with public health guidelines. Based on a sample representative survey (N = 800) of Haredi Jews in Israel, we found that Haredi Jews mostly followed COVID-19 health regulations. Among the respondents who were non-compliant, however, we found large divergences which mostly reflected religious affiliation. While members of Lithuanian and Sephardi communities reported following guidelines, Hasidim, a more charismatic sub-group, were 12% and 14% more likely to flout public health guidelines than their Lithuanian and Sephardi counterparts, respectively. Despite this inner diversity, all Haredim were portrayed in Israeli media as one homogeneous group that was blamed for flouting public health guidelines and spreading COVID-19. Based on these findings, we argue for the importance of public health messaging that attends to diverse aspects of religious dogma, practice and observance by creating partnerships and sustainable relationships between different actors and stakeholders. In addition, we found that compliance was also shaped by knowledge about COVID-19 and public concern. Taking these findings together, health communication that acknowledges religious diversity while providing critical knowledge about the pandemic is key to developing and implementing community-focused interventions and public health programs. Practically, these insights help to improve pandemic governance as well as contributing theoretically to the study of public health relations and religion by highlighting how discourses around health vary and how differently positioned actors shape representations of responsiveness and health compliance.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Responses of men and women within different Haredi sub-groups to wedding dilemma regarding social distance guidelines.
Participants responses to the following dilemma: “Imagine your best friend scheduled a wedding for his son/daughter and the new guidelines now say that the wedding can only include twenty people outdoors. What would you recommend that they do?”.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Responses of men and women within different Haredi sub-groups to Jewish day school dilemma regarding social distance guidelines.
Participants responses to the following dilemma: “Your neighbor, who knew he had COVID, went into an elevator with you, without wearing a mask. As a consequence, you might have covid. Would you send your children to Talmud Torah (Jewish day school) in the next few days?”.

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