Abstract
Being in a rapidly changing and dynamic environment during the COVID-19 pandemic, individuals’ perceptions change on a daily basis, and this starts to inform the status of knowledge, attitude, and practices (KAP) during the second wave of the pandemic. Aim: To assess the KAP on COVID-19 among students, teaching staff, and administrative staff in the Asir region for the first time. Methods: A questionnaire-based survey cross-sectional study was conducted from 10 February to 10 March 2021 using an online questionnaire. Results: In the survey of students and staff in educational institutes in the Asir region, the target population were well informed about COVID-19; in 10 out of 13 questions, more than 80% of the respondents answered correctly. The attitude of the target populations was quite positive. They were worried about the increase in the number of COVID-19 cases. The target populations were concerned (94.8%) for their kith and kin not to get infected. The target populations agree with the precautionary measures that were taken by Saudi authorities. A positive association was found between knowledge and practices as well as knowledge and attitudes of the target population. A significantly positive association was observed between attitudes and practices of the educational institutes’ respondents in Asir, Saudi Arabia. Conclusion: The students and staff in educational institutes in the Asir region have a high level of knowledge about COVID-19, have a positive attitude toward it, take proper precautions against it, and are enthusiastic about the COVID-19 vaccine.
1. Introduction
The SARS-CoV-2 outbreak first started in November and was reported in December 2019 in Wuhan, China []. The virus is highly transmissible, mainly through respiratory routes, spreading across the globe and so the WHO declared COVID-19 as a pandemic on 11 March 2020 [], which led to the start of public lockdowns across the globe.
So far, we do not have specific treatments for COVID-19. The available vaccines are significantly contributing to controlling the viral spread as well as decreasing the severity of COVID-19, but vaccines are also associated with complications []. A significant number of infection cases have been reported even in the vaccinated individuals []. The occasional advent of various viral variants further compounded the containment of the COVID-19 pandemic. The respiratory route of the viral transmission makes it more lethal, as air inhalation cannot be escaped.
The COVID-19 pandemic has been linked to overcrowding and poor infection control practices. SARS-CoV-2 spread and the COVID-19 pandemic has been controlled very well in Saudi Arabia by implementing very strong control measures []. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) moved swiftly to enact ground-breaking steps to limit the transmission; on 27 February 2022, the KSA imposed restrictions on the inbound Umrah pilgrimage. The Kingdom also restricted the movement of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) individuals who had recently visited COVID-19-impacted countries, terminated the then recently implemented e-VISA program, and prohibited people from entering from COVID-19 affected nations []. Finally, the Kingdom’s universities, colleges, and mosques were all closed [,]. Although the infection control measures that were imposed by the government and the Ministry of Health (MOH) were the primary intervention to minimize the spread of the virus in both healthcare settings and to the community, a great role was still available for the level of awareness and response in the community [,,,], especially after the availability of vaccines. At that time, many studies suggested that vaccine hesitancy is affected by the knowledge of a population about virus prevention [,]. Late during the pandemic, many KAP studies were published about COVID-19. However, the rapidly changing and dynamic environment, where individuals’ perceptions change on a daily basis according to the pandemic status and morbidity and mortality rates across the country, highlighted the need to gain information about the status of KAP during the second wave of pandemic. Hence, in the present study we aimed to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) on COVID-19 among students, teaching staff, and administrative staff in the Asir region. The advocate role of this target population to promote the proper knowledge to the community is indispensable, in addition to being a role model in the proper application of preventive measures. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to present such data from the Asir region. As geographical distribution and social determinants are important factors in the development of proper prevention plans, we believe this study will help us to understand some essential aspects for controlling the current or any subsequent pandemics in this region.
2. Methodology
2.1. Study Design, Setting, and Population
This survey was conducted as an observational cross-sectional study using a pre-validated questionnaire from 10 February to 10 March 2021, for a four-week duration. An online questionnaire was prepared using a Google form and distributed through social media using a snowball technique among students, teaching staff, and administrative staff from the Asir Region of Saudi Arabia. The questionnaire was originally made in English then translated into Arabic.
2.2. Study Population and Sample Size
In the Asir area, there are 544,251 students, teaching, and non-teaching staff in educational institutions [,]. The nonprobability convenience sampling approach was used to select the respondents. The estimated minimum target sample size was 384, which was measured with a confidence interval of 95%, an acceptable margin of error of 5%, an expected frequency of 50%, and a design effect of 1.0 through STATCALC on Epi Info software. The inclusion criteria were as follows: Saudi/non-Saudi students, faculty members, and administrative staff in the Asir Region. The participants who refused to participate were excluded from the study [].
2.3. Survey Design and Pilot Study
After a review of the literature [,,], the authors prepared a standardized questionnaire in English. The draft questionnaire was validated by five academicians for review and comments in order to ensure applicability, suitability, and consistency in our environment, as well as to define the face and content validity. It was piloted by 15 persons for feedback, remarks, and advice on its transparency, simplicity, clarity of questions, and comprehension. The answers of the pilot study were not included in the final analysis, but the input was reviewed, the double-barreled, confusing, and leading questions were corrected, and a finalized form of the questionnaire was developed.
2.4. Data Collection
The survey was carried out using an online Google Form to make it easier for the participants to fill out the questionnaire. The survey was divided into four sections. Section 1 included items about the participants’ background and sociodemographic characteristics. Age, gender, nationality, race, place of residence, and academic program were all identified. Section 2 consisted of 13 items and was designed to assess the target population’s understanding of COVID-19. “Yes”, “no”, and “I don’t know” were the answers to the questions on the signs and symptoms of coronavirus, as well as preventative steps and advice.
Section 3 included eight items to assess the respondent’s attitude towards COVID-19, and Section 4 looked at how the respondents handled the latest epidemic. It consisted of seven questions, with three possible answers from the participants: “Accept,” “Disagree,” and “Neutral”. The respondents’ awareness of, attitude against, and precautionary measures toward COVID-19 were the dependent variables in this analysis. The age, ethnicity, nationality, education levels, and comorbid conditions of the respondents served as independent variables in this analysis. The knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) scores for each participant were determined after the answers were tallied [].
The initial Bloom’s cut-off points of 80.0–100.0%, 60.0–79.0%, and 59.0% were adapted and updated from a KAP study on dengue fever prevention in Male, Maldives, and Bangkok in 2007 and a KAP study on COVID-19 among chronic disease patients in Northwest Ethiopia in 2020 [].
For the knowledge section (13 questions, total score: 13), each correct answer (yes) received a score of one, while incorrect responses (no and I don’t know) received a score of zero for the information portion. Bloom’s cut-off point was used to categorize participants’ total knowledge scores, which were classified as high between 11 and 13 points, moderate between 8 and 10 points, and low below 7 points. The overall attitude score (8 questions, total score: 8) was classified as positive if it was between 6.4 and 8 points, neutral if it was between 4.8 and 6.3 points, and negative if it was less than 4.7 points, using the same Bloom’s cut-off point.
For the precautionary measures section (7 questions, total score: 7), yes was assigned a score of 1, sometimes a score of 0, and no a score of 0. The overall score was graded as acceptable for a score between 5.6 and 7 points, mild for a score between 4.2 and 5.5 points, and unacceptable for a score of less than 4.2 points using the same Bloom’s cut-off point.
2.5. Statistical Analysis
The responses were collected in Microsoft Excel spreadsheets (2016). The downloaded data were analyzed using SPSS 21.0 statistical software (IBM Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). The results were described in terms of mean frequencies or percentage for descriptive statistics. Significance for comparison was performed by the Mann–Whitney U test to compare two groups. The Kruskal–Wallis test was performed to compare more than two groups in the survey. For association analysis, Spearman correlations were used.
2.6. Ethical Approval
The participants’ inclusion in the questionnaire was entirely voluntary. The data confidentiality was maintained. After reading the introductory questionnaire consent form, which outlined the study’s goals and conditions, the participants were asked to choose an alternative (Yes/No) as informed written consent before answering the questionnaire. Ethical approval was obtained from the Research Ethics Committee at King Khalid University (HAPO-06-B-001), on 24 December 2020, with an approval number (ECM#2020-3205)-(HAPO-06-B-001).
3. Results
3.1. Demography of Target Population
A total of 2191 responses were analyzed. The highest proportion of respondents (38.6%) belonged to the 20–30 age group. These responses were mainly from students (51.4%) with bachelor education level (68.6%) and more than two-thirds of respondents were female, which contributed 70.5%. A total of 76.8% of respondents in the study were from people living in the urban area of Asir. More than two thirds of the respondents (72.8%) had attended COVID-19 infection training or orientation sessions. Only 16% of the respondents had been infected with the SARS-CoV-2 but 71.3% of respondents had encountered COVID-19 patients closely. Although all forms of the media contributed to informing people about the COVID-19, the target population mostly relied on the Saudi government websites and media to get informed about the pandemic (Table 1). Supplementary Table S1 shows the results of Kruskal–Wallis and Mann–Whitney tests to examine the association between knowledge, attitude, practice, and other factors. Its shows that there were significant differences in KAP among different ages, gender, employments status, places of residence, and levels of education (Supplementary Table S1).
Table 1.
Demographics of the survey population.
3.2. Knowledge of the Target Population towards COVID-19
Table 2 presents the respondents who were well informed about the COVID-19; in 10 out of 13 questions, more than 80% of respondents answered correctly. The respondents in Asir showed a good understanding of the importance of preventive measures, such as wearing masks and maintaining social distancing to contain COIVD-19. This is shown in the response of the questions related to preventive measures where more than 90% of respondents correctly answered these questions.
Table 2.
Knowledge of the survey population about COVID-19.
3.3. Attitudes of the Target Population towards COVID-19
More than 75% of people responded positively to six questions. They were worried by the surge of the COVID-19 cases. A total of 94.8% of the target population were concerned for their kith and kin not to get infected rather than themselves. The target populations agree (89%) with the precautionary measures that were taken by Saudi authorities and supported (93%) the postponing or cancelling of mass gatherings (Table 3).
Table 3.
Attitude of the survey population towards COVID-19.
3.4. Practices of the Target Population towards COVID-19
More than 90% respondents washed their hands for more than 20 s, and over 93% of the respondents wash hands after touching the personal items of a person with a cough or cold. The target population washed their hands (89.3%) after touching grocery bags, while 86.3% of the respondents washed their hands after touching doorknobs. The use of gel sanitizer was practiced by 91.9% of the target population. A total of 86.1% of the respondents avoided touching their face, eyes, nose, and mouth and 88.3% wore face mask outside the home. Frequently used gadgets were disinfected by 72.8% of the respondents (Table 4).
Table 4.
Practices performed by the survey population to contain COVID-19.
3.5. Association Analysis of the Target Population towards COVID-19
The Spearman two-tailed correlation analysis between the knowledge and practices of the target population showed a negligible positive association with a correlation coefficient of 0.07 (Figure 1, Table 5). Similarly, knowledge and attitude of the target population also showed negligible positive association with a correlation coefficient value of 0.05 (Figure 2, Table 6). Interestingly, a moderate positive association was observed between attitude and practice of the respondents with a correlation coefficient of 0.367 in Asir (Figure 3, Table 7).
Figure 1.
Knowledge and practice of the surveyed population a showed negligible positive association.
Table 5.
Association of the Spearman correlation between knowledge and practice.
Figure 2.
Knowledge and attitude of the target population also showed a negligible positive association.
Table 6.
Association of the Spearman correlation between knowledge and attitude.
Figure 3.
A positive association was observed between the attitude and practice of the surveyed population.
Table 7.
Association of the Spearman correlation between attitude and practice.
4. Discussion
Since its start in November 2019, COVID-19 has severely affected the world and its death toll and financial damages seemed to be innumerable. COVID-19 has had more impact on some countries than on others. One of the worst examples is the Hajj and Umrah pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia, with both open only to a limited number of people with compulsory vaccination and ensured precautionary measures. The COVID-19 vaccine significantly helps people in protection from the disease, but even double vaccinated people are still prone to SARS-CoV-2 infection [,]. Mutations in the viral genome keep producing new variants with a recent viral variant named Omicron becoming the dominant variant of the virus in many western European countries where a double vaccination rate is more than 70% []. As such, the preventive measures are still the mainstay to avoid SARS-CoV-2 infection and thus, the COVID-19 pandemic.
Many studies [,] have been published to investigate the KAP in the Asir region, yet to the best of our knowledge, this is the first one in the region surveying people that are associated with educational institutes to a larger scale, which are considered as a source of knowledge and associated people are considered as ambassadors of that knowledge. As such, we decided to perform a KAP survey on COVID-19 from students, teaching, and non-teaching staff in the Asir region of Saudi Arabia.
Based on the population in educational institutes in Asir, the Epi Info software program required 381 survey responses to have a significant study but our target population was very keen to respond to the KAP survey on COVID-19 and we have got 2191 responses. The other published surveys in the region analyzed 740 participants [], and asserted that the population of Asir is 2.26 billion, which is not true. Another study was based on 178 participants only [], which is less than is required to have meaningful analysis. In the survey, we have covered a variety of age groups, ranging from below 18 years all the way up to above 60 years of age. In contrast, the Adam et al. study had almost 90% of the participants belonging to the 22–25 years age group, which makes our survey very informative to hear from all different age groups and helped us to draw a more complete picture of the people living in the Asir region.
Students were the highest respondents (51.4%) and that reflects in the age group also, as most of the respondents (38.6%) belonged to 20–30 years of age, which was also found in another study []. Interestingly, more than two-thirds of the respondents were female (70.5%), suggesting the females were keener to respond to the KAP survey on COVID-19. Higher female participation (88.5%) was also found in another study from the Asir region []. We got more than three-quarters (76.8%) of the responses from the target population who lived in urban areas as they were more exposed to the media and awareness programs that are run by the government. The study was designed to have a survey on the population belonging to educational institutes and the majority of the respondents (68.8%) were educated at a bachelor level. A similar result (60.1%) was also reported in the Adam et al. 2021 study, which is obvious from the previous assertions as most of the respondents belonged to 20–30 years of age and were students. Interestingly, a significant number of the respondents (72.8%) attended a COVID-19 infection training or orientation session, which suggests that the target population was keen to know the infectious agent, transmission, symptoms, and preventive measures of COVID-19. The survey revealed that 16% of the respondents were infected with SARS-CoV-2 but a significant number (71.3%) of their acquaintances had encountered COVID-19. Remarkably, the majority of the population was interested in taking the COVID-19 vaccine (56%), which was also found in the neighboring Jizan region survey [], although many other studies reported hesitancy in vaccination of surveyed people [,,,,].
This high degree of awareness might be attributed to the Saudi Ministry of Health’s attempts to raise public awareness of this unique virus by sending text messages and using other forms of communication, such as television and social media. Furthermore, we discovered a substantial difference in the knowledge level across individuals with various educational levels; those with a lower educational level had less knowledge than those with a higher educational level. Other studies also found a high level of knowledge among participants of the survey but they did not find significant variations in knowledge among various groups [,].
The attitudes of the target populations were quite positive, which has been found repeatedly in many studies [,,,,]. They were worried about a surge in the number of COVID-19 cases. Interestingly, the survey revealed that the target populations were more concerned (94.8%) for their kith and kin not to get infected than themselves, which was also reported in Khaled et al. 2020 [] survey. The target populations showed good faith in the Saudi government and agreed with the precautionary measures that were taken by Saudi authorities. They practiced most of the precautionary measures that were recommended by the Saudi authorities. These responses suggest that target populations were very responsive towards precautionary measures that were taken by the Saudi authorities, which helped them to curb COVID-19.
A similar study was conducted by Khaled et al. 2020 on the knowledge and attitude of the community from the Asir region, Saudi Arabia, toward COVID-19 and their precautionary measures against the disease. This study confirms that the residents of the Asir Region have a high knowledge of, demonstrate a positive attitude toward, and use appropriate precautionary measures against COVID-19, which is associated with obtaining information about the virus. This is in contrast to our study where we found that good practices are better associated with attitude rather knowledge about the COIVD-19.
It is worth noting that in this study, better COVID-19 knowledge scores were shown to be connected with a decreased risk of unfavorable attitudes and potentially harmful behaviors regarding the COVID-19 epidemic. These findings highlight the necessity of enhancing COVID-19 understanding among students, teaching staff, and non-teaching staff through health education, which may lead to changes in their attitudes and behaviors concerning COVID-19.
Interestingly, the association analysis in the present survey on KAP revealed that the knowledge of the target population about COVID-19 was very weakly associated with practice but the attitude of the surveyed population was associated with practice to contain the pandemic, which suggest that attitude is a bigger factor to move people to practice measures correctly to curb the COVID-19.
5. Conclusions
The KAP survey that we performed in the Asir region revealed that the target population has good knowledge about COIVD-19. They understood well and exhibited a positive attitude towards the importance of the precautionary measures, such as wearing a mask, maintaining social distancing, and washing their hands for more than 20 s after touching grocery bags, doorknobs, and personal items of a person with cough or cold. This is the consequence of the efforts that were made by the Saudi authorities. The people are more concerned for their kith and kin not to be infected by SARS-CoV-2 than themselves. The target population is quite satisfied with the measures that were taken by the Saudi government to curb the pandemic and the majority of them are willing to take the vaccine.
6. Limitations of the Study
Being an online questionnaire exposes the study to selection and recall bias possibilities. For ease of filling out the form at a time of being overwhelmed by COVID-19, we used a “yes/no” option. The concern of a higher knowledge scores can’t be ruled out.
Supplementary Materials
The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/vaccines10122014/s1, Table S1: Survey Statistics.
Author Contributions
Conception/design: N.S.S., A.A., R.H.E.-s. and M.K. Data collection: N.S.S. and M.K. Data analysis/interpretation: K.O. and M.K. Drafting article: M.K. Critical revision of the article: N.S.S., R.H.E.-s. and M.K. Verifying underlying data: N.S.S. and M.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
The authors extend their appreciation to the Deanship of Scientific Research at King Khalid University for funding this work through Large Groups (Project under grant number RGP.2/244/43).
Institutional Review Board Statement
Ethical approval was obtained from the Research Ethics Committee at King Khalid University (HAPO-06-B-001), on 24 December 2020, with an approval number (ECM#2020-3205)-(HAPO-06-B-001).
Informed Consent Statement
Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.
Data Availability Statement
Not applicable.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank all the participants who took part in this study.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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