Fig 1.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with doctors’ advice.
1 = not so much; 2 = sometimes; 3 = always/almost always; 4 = not relevant; 5 = I don’t know.
Table 1.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with doctor’s advice.
Results from ordinal regressions: Log-odds and significance levels.
Fig 2.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with the advice of public health institutes.
1 = not so much; 2 = sometimes; 3 = always/almost always; 4 = not relevant; 5 = I don’t know.
Table 2.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with the recommendations of public health institutes.
Results from ordinal regressions: Log-odds and significance levels.
Fig 3.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with behavior of friends and acquaintances.
1 = not so much; 2 = sometimes; 3 = always/almost always; 4 = not relevant; 5 = I don’t know.
Table 3.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with behavior of friends and acquaintances.
Results from ordinal regressions: Log-odds and significance levels.
Fig 4.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with behavior of family members.
1 = not so much; 2 = sometimes; 3 = always/almost always; 4 = not relevant; 5 = I don’t know.
Table 4.
Protective mask-wearing behavior reported to concur with family members.
Results from ordinal regressions: Log-odds and significance levels.
Table 5.
Percentage of respondents answering “not relevant” to questions 3–8.
Table 6.
Qualitative evaluation of the free text data on experiences, thoughts, and feelings with mask-wearing during the pandemic*.