Using time-use diaries to track changing behavior across successive stages of COVID-19 social restrictions
Using time-use diaries to track changing behavior across successive stages of COVID-19 social restrictions
How did people change their behavior over the different phases of the UK COVID-19 restrictions, and how did these changes affect their risk of being exposed to infection? Time-use diary surveys are unique in providing a complete chronicle of daily behavior: 24-h continuous records of the populations’ activities, their social context, and their location. We present results from four such surveys, collected in real time from representative UK samples, both before and at three points over the course of the current pandemic. Comparing across the four waves, we find evidence of substantial changes in the UK population’s behavior relating to activities, locations, and social context. We assign different levels of risk to combinations of activities, locations, and copresence to compare risk-related behavior across successive “lockdowns.” We find evidence that during the second lockdown (November 2020), there was an increase in high-risk behaviors relative to the first (starting March 2020). This increase is shown to be associated with more paid work time in the workplace. At a time when capacity is still limited both in respect of immunization and track–trace technology, governments must continue to rely on changes in people’s daily behaviors to contain the spread of COVID-19 and similar viruses. Time-use diary information of this type, collected in real time across the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, can provide policy makers with information to assess and quantify changes in daily behaviors and the impact they are likely to have on overall behavioral-associated risks.
Sullivan, Oriel
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Gershuny, Jonathan
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Sevilla, Almudena
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Foliano, Francesca
323e8871-4b9f-4a78-b22f-39f4e46eca39
Vega-Rapun, Margarita
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de Grignon, Juana Lamote
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Harms, Teresa
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Walthéry, Pierre
a8f97a1c-ca8d-44ba-963b-a43b6ff47649
23 August 2021
Sullivan, Oriel
2360d417-b076-44e6-b57f-e6d7ca4d2ece
Gershuny, Jonathan
5c28f981-3665-4bff-9cfa-db826b11d3dc
Sevilla, Almudena
29b75c95-3e2b-4891-97fb-f9e9c9e46ef3
Foliano, Francesca
323e8871-4b9f-4a78-b22f-39f4e46eca39
Vega-Rapun, Margarita
1a4663d2-a94f-42fe-ac27-fd0054da6e54
de Grignon, Juana Lamote
633390d6-5330-4d71-992b-ec4b8a219725
Harms, Teresa
c1bc0bc1-4d66-422f-b430-b18ddac95602
Walthéry, Pierre
a8f97a1c-ca8d-44ba-963b-a43b6ff47649
Sullivan, Oriel, Gershuny, Jonathan, Sevilla, Almudena, Foliano, Francesca, Vega-Rapun, Margarita, de Grignon, Juana Lamote, Harms, Teresa and Walthéry, Pierre
(2021)
Using time-use diaries to track changing behavior across successive stages of COVID-19 social restrictions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118 (35), [e2101724118].
(doi:10.1073/pnas.2101724118).
Abstract
How did people change their behavior over the different phases of the UK COVID-19 restrictions, and how did these changes affect their risk of being exposed to infection? Time-use diary surveys are unique in providing a complete chronicle of daily behavior: 24-h continuous records of the populations’ activities, their social context, and their location. We present results from four such surveys, collected in real time from representative UK samples, both before and at three points over the course of the current pandemic. Comparing across the four waves, we find evidence of substantial changes in the UK population’s behavior relating to activities, locations, and social context. We assign different levels of risk to combinations of activities, locations, and copresence to compare risk-related behavior across successive “lockdowns.” We find evidence that during the second lockdown (November 2020), there was an increase in high-risk behaviors relative to the first (starting March 2020). This increase is shown to be associated with more paid work time in the workplace. At a time when capacity is still limited both in respect of immunization and track–trace technology, governments must continue to rely on changes in people’s daily behaviors to contain the spread of COVID-19 and similar viruses. Time-use diary information of this type, collected in real time across the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, can provide policy makers with information to assess and quantify changes in daily behaviors and the impact they are likely to have on overall behavioral-associated risks.
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Published date: 23 August 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 509902
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509902
ISSN: 0027-8424
PURE UUID: dcbd8da9-5439-46d8-bc07-954535055216
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2026 17:51
Last modified: 11 Mar 2026 03:14
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Contributors
Author:
Oriel Sullivan
Author:
Jonathan Gershuny
Author:
Almudena Sevilla
Author:
Francesca Foliano
Author:
Margarita Vega-Rapun
Author:
Juana Lamote de Grignon
Author:
Teresa Harms
Author:
Pierre Walthéry
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