Publication date: Dec 31, 2025
Trust in government has emerged as one of the strongest predictors of national performance in fighting COVID-19. This commentary aims to take stock of the vast literature on trust and compliance with public health measures that has emerged during the pandemic to synthesize policy-relevant recommendations about: 1) How to conceptualize trust; 2) Whether trust is always deserved; and 3) How governments can earn (appropriate levels of) trust. Based on a critical reading of the literature, we develop a framework that conceptualizes trust as falling along a continuum ranging from extreme distrust to blind trust with the ideal point- “informed” or “basic” trust-falling in the mid-point of the continuum. We illustrate the continuum with examples and provide recommendations regarding how governments can build more nuanced disease responses that account for individuals and sub-groups at different rungs on the continuum while (re)building trust. We conclude that trust-building is a long-term project that must continue in non-crisis times.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Build | compliance |
Covid | COVID-19 |
Governments | global health |
Pandemic | Health Policy |
Rethinking | Humans |
Pandemics | |
Public Health | |
SARS-CoV-2 | |
Trust | |
Trust | |
vaccine hesitancy |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 |