The Relationship between Personality Traits and Compliance with the COVID-19 Preventive Measures in Kosovo

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Date

2025-07-10

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AAB College

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic urged systematic restrictive measures in order to avoid the spread of the virus. Different countries applied different restrictive measures; however, their efficacy was vastly dependent on the willingness of the people to comply with them. How people perceived the pandemic yielded different adaptive behavior to preventative measures. In this direction, individual characteristics (i.e., personality) seem very important. The current study aimed to map a relationship between personality structure as postulated within the five-factor model of personality with the tendency to comply with preventive measures, as mediated by perceived stress and concerns over coronavirus. In a sample of 3252 adults, we found that the traits of openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness directly and positively predicted compliance. However, concerns over coronavirus partially but positively mediated the relationship between agreeableness and conscientiousness on compliance. Perceived stress, on the other hand, was not a significant mediator, although it was significantly and positively predicted by neuroticism but negatively by extraversion. These findings showed that different personality traits have different direct effects on compliance with preventative measures.

Description

Punim ne fushen e Psikologjise.

Keywords

COVID-19, five-factor personality structure, concerns over coronavirus, perceived stress, compliance

Citation

Telaku, N.; Musliu, A.; Cana, L.; Han, H.; Zharku, L. The Relationship between Personality Traits and Compliance with the COVID-19 Preventive Measures in Kosovo. Psych 2022, 4, 856–867. https://doi.org/10.3390/ psych4040063

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