Introduction
The spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and considered the largest global health crisis of the 21st century, first started in Wuhan, China, in December 2019 and quickly spread around the world. On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) officially declared it a pandemic [
1,
2]. As of June 29, 2022, more than 545 million people have been infected worldwide and more than 6.33 million people have died of COVID-19 worldwide; thus, COVID-19 has been confirmed as a strongly contagious, fatal, and serious acute respiratory syndrome [
2,
3]. Although therapeutics and prophylactic vaccines for this novel virus have been developed and applied, gradually slowing the spread of the disease, the pandemic continues, causing 820,000 new infected cases per day worldwide as of the end of June 2022 [
1,
2].
Since the declaration of a pandemic, the WHO and governments of each country have responded with various policies and guidelines to prevent the spread of the virus. Although some treatments and vaccines have proven efficacy, SARS-CoV-2 is still a highly contagious and deadly virus that poses a threat to mankind. In addition to hand hygiene and mask wearing, social distancing and quarantine have become basic and essential practices in daily life [
2,
3]. In 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, South Korea (hereafter, Korea) was gripped by fear and chaos. According to government policies such as remote learning, working from home, and bans on gatherings, except for essential livelihood and occupational activities, almost all daily life took place in the home, and work, school, and social activities were greatly restricted [
3]. A series of unprecedented experiences, such as fear of COVID-19, financial difficulties due to job loss or lack of economic activity, psychological difficulties due to social isolation, and deprivation of indoor and outdoor sports activities except at home, caused heightened anxiety and stress. Overall, it is clear that COVID-19 affected the physical and mental health of the Korean people [
1,
4].
Meanwhile, as COVID-19 vaccination has been administered to 66.6% of the global population [
5] and the acute transmission period has passed, considerable attention both in Korea and abroad is now being paid to its impact on various aspects of people who experienced the pandemic era. In addition to the impact of COVID-19 on physical and mental health [
3,
6], research is increasingly illuminating its impact on low-income and elderly population groups, who are considered vulnerable social groups in disasters [
7,
8].
This study investigated the health behaviors of adult women who could be vulnerable to health in an infection crisis called a pandemic. Traditionally and still today, women have been considered primary caregivers in the family, and they also play a major role in responding to family health issues and health care needs [
9]. During the first year of the pandemic when almost all daily activities were conducted in the home due to the closure of childcare services and schools, it is thought that women took on a leading role as health managers in the home to protect their families from the spread of the COVID-19, as well as continuing to handle their responsibilities at work. In addition, the tasks of childcare and education, which had been shared by society, had to be carried out at home, placing women in a burdensome and difficult situation where they had to take care of and educate their children by themselves [
7,
10]. It is also probable that women mainly performed homeschooling and household chores such as meal preparation and cleaning for family members who worked from home. Under this aggravated burden, it is likely that women were not able to find time to exercise or were too fatigued, thereby affecting the health-related behaviors that they had previously maintained [
10,
11]. Compared to men, women have worked more in the face-to-face service industry, which is the first battleground for infectious diseases. Many women suffered economic difficulties due to the closure of the service industry as a whole, where women were mainly employed [
11,
12]. The economic difficulties could also have aggravated women’s difficulties in maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
Various studies have dealt with the effects of the pandemic on the economy, education, and culture in Korea and abroad [
13-
15]. However, studies on the relationship between the pandemic and health have generally focused on the pandemic’s effects on mental health [
1,
16], and the study participants were often limited to older adults or children and adolescents [
8,
17]. No study has yet investigated health behaviors in all Korean adult women during the pandemic through a comparison of data collected in the first year of the spread of COVID-19 with data obtained before the pandemic. As such, in this study, we attempted to understand changes in adult women’s health behaviors in association with the pandemic. This study compared and analyzed data from the 2019 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES), which was not affected by COVID-19, and from the 2020 KNHANES, which was conducted after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, to examine changes in adult women’s health behaviors during the pandemic. Since the KNHANES contains data on representative samples of the Korean people, these surveys could provide reliable data on the health behaviors of Korean women in the first year of the pandemic.
The purpose of this study was to identify changes in the health behaviors of Korean women during the COVID-19 pandemic for use as basic data to establish strategies to improve women’s health in a similar global or national emergency in the future. The specific objectives of this study were as follows:
(1) To compare the general characteristics of Korean adult women before and after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
(2) To compare the health behaviors of Korean adult women before and after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
(3) To identify changes in health behaviors of Korean adult women during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to their health behaviors before the pandemic.
Discussion
This is a secondary analysis using the data of the eighth KNHANES, conducted twice by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency before and during the COVID-19 pandemic (2019–2020) to understand the changes in the health behaviors of Korean adult women during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In this study, there was an increase in the number of adult women perceiving their dental health as good in 2020 (during the pandemic) compared to 2019 (before the pandemic). In the second round of the sixth KNHANES, which was conducted in 2014, the subjective dental health perception of adult women over 19 years of age was good in 18.0% and ordinary or poor in 82.0% of participants [
25]. Considering that 22.0% of the women perceived their dental health as good in the current study, it seems that there was an increasing tendency in adult women’s likelihood of perceiving their dental health as good during the pandemic compared to before the pandemic. In a study on dental health behaviors conducted among college students during the COVID-19 pandemic, the average frequency of brushing per day increased, as well as the use of oral care products such as dental floss and interdental toothbrushes, indicating a higher level of interest in dental hygiene [
4]. Due to the lack of previous studies on the dental health behavior of adults during the pandemic, it is difficult to make a direct comparison. However, as mask wearing became mandatory as a simple and effective method to reduce the spread of COVID-19 [
26], based on reports showing the main route of infection of COVID-19 was close contact (within 2 m) due to droplets that are emitted during coughing or speaking [
27], this change in dental health behavior cannot be viewed as a phenomenon limited only to college students because dental hygiene management has become important due to mask wearing, as well as for COVID-19 prevention. Therefore, it can be inferred that adult women had more positive perceptions of their dental health status as they paid more attention to dental hygiene during the pandemic and took good care of it. Subjective dental health perception is related to objective dental health status [
18,
25] and the overall quality of life in adults [
18]. Since COVID-19 has had a major influence on work, home, and social life throughout the world, it may have also affected dental health, but no studies have specifically investigated its effects on dental health behaviors [
4]. Therefore, it is necessary to identify the changes in dental health behavior during the pandemic, investigate the reasons for these changes, and reflect them in future dental health management policies.
In this study, adult women showed a decrease in exposure to secondhand smoke at work and in public places in 2020 (during the pandemic) compared to 2019 (before the pandemic). This is consistent with a previous study [
28] that reported that adolescents’ exposure to secondhand smoke in schools and public places decreased from 2019 to 2020 based on a comparison of the health behaviors of adolescents before and during the pandemic. However, in that previous study, exposure to secondhand smoke at home also decreased [
28], showing a difference from the current study. In our study, exposure to secondhand smoke at home decreased from 43.9% in 2019 to 35.6% in 2020, but the difference was not statistically significant. Secondhand smoke, which refers to nonsmokers inhaling cigarette smoke exhaled by smokers [
29], increases the risk of respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer due to toxic substances [
30]. It is estimated that 1% of annual mortality worldwide is related to secondhand smoke [
31], and associations of secondhand smoke with mental illnesses such as depression, as well as physical diseases, have been reported [
19]. Accordingly, many countries are making efforts to reduce the damage caused by secondhand smoke, and Korea is also expanding nonsmoking facilities to reduce the damage caused by secondhand smoke [
27]. However, exposure to secondhand smoke continues even in nonsmoking facilities, such as exposure to ultrafine particles leaked from smoking rooms in nonsmoking facilities [
32]. In this sense, the decrease in exposure to secondhand smoke after COVID-19 in the previous study [
28] and the current study is significant. This decrease in exposure to secondhand smoke may be explained by a decrease in smoking during the COVID-19 pandemic, as reported in a previous study [
33]. Furthermore, a decrease in face-to-face contact in public places due to mask wearing and social distancing may have also contributed to the reduced exposure to secondhand smoke. However, since this phenomenon occurred as a way to protect oneself from COVID-19, not a way to avoid the harm caused by secondhand smoke to others, continuing attention should be paid to exposure to secondhand smoke. In addition, as various measures associated with COVID-19 are lifted, it would be necessary to prepare for the possibility of an increase in exposure to secondhand smoke. In this study, exposure to secondhand smoke at home showed a tendency to decrease during the pandemic, but without statistical significance. Considering the increased frequency of working from home due to the pandemic, exposure to secondhand smoke at home can be an important threat to women’s health; therefore, it is necessary to clarify the actual situation and provide appropriate interventions. In particular, it may be necessary to focus on women who have no occupation as they spend more time at home and thus have higher chances of being exposed to secondhand smoke at home.
In this study, adult women showed increased moderate-intensity work and leisure activities in 2020 (during the pandemic) compared to 2019 (before the pandemic). Most preceding studies on changes in physical activity before and during the pandemic reported a decreasing tendency during the pandemic [
34], unlike this study. This may have been due to differences in the measurement of physical activity in previous research and our study. In our study, moderate-intensity work was defined as an activity that caused at least 10 minutes of shortness of breath or a slightly rapid heartbeat, such as carrying light objects, cleaning, and activities performed as part of parenting. After the outbreak of COVID-19, as more office workers worked from home and more students took classes from home, they spent more time at home, and as a result, women also became directly responsible for family care and education [
7,
10]. This may explain the increase in moderate-intensity work, including cleaning and child-rearing activities, compared to pre-COVID-19 among women. In addition, in our study, moderate-intensity leisure activities, excluding work-related physical activities, were defined as sports, exercises, and leisure activities that cause continuous shortness of breath or slightly fast-paced heart rate for at least 10 minutes, such as light jogging, weight training, golf, sports dancing, and Pilates. Due to government policies to prevent COVID-19, the time spent at home has increased, while restrictions on work, school, and social activities have increased [
3]. The frequency of at-home training has increased as the time spent at home has risen, especially among women [
35]. Considering that weight training was included in moderate-intensity leisure activities in this study, the increase in at-home training may have resulted in the increased moderate-intensity leisure activities.
In contrast, the decrease in walking during the pandemic in this study is consistent with a previous study [
34] that also reported a decrease in physical activity. The decrease in physical activity during the pandemic may have resulted from social distancing measures implemented by the government to stop the spread of COVID-19 in community [
4,
34]. Social distancing is a basic method to curb the spread of COVID-19 [
34], but it has resulted in negative phenomena such as decreased physical activity and increased sedentary behavior [
36]. Research related to physical activity has emerged as an urgent public health topic during the COVID-19 pandemic [
37], as decreased physical activity has been reported to be related to various factors such as sex, age, occupation, stress, and obesity [
38]. In the COVID-19 pandemic, to maintain the same level of physical activity as before the pandemic, physical activity at home is encouraged [
20]. Studies have described using web-based data for physical activity at home [
39] and have found that at-home training increased during the pandemic among adolescents [
40]. Therefore, it will be necessary to develop and disseminate physical activity programs that can be used at home in consideration of individual characteristics. In addition, with the recent easing of measures associated with COVID-19, including social distancing, it is necessary to identify resultant changes in physical activity and encourage people to appropriately combine physical activities that can be done at home with those that can be done outside of the home depending on the situation.
In this study, the percentage of adult women who had 9 hours or more of sleep per day increased in 2020 (during the pandemic) compared to 2019 (before the pandemic). A previous study reported that the COVID-19 pandemic increased sleep duration [
41], consistent with this study. This can be attributed to the increased time spent at home due to social distancing and the increased frequency of working from home due to COVID-19 [
42]. However, in adolescents, the sleep satisfaction rate [
28] and recovery from sleep fatigue [
43] increased during the pandemic, improving the quality of sleep, whereas the quality of sleep decreased in adults during the pandemic [
41,
42]. This can be attributed to the increase in stress for adults due to the economic blows caused by COVID-19 [
43] or increased child-rearing hours due to school closures [
42]. Therefore, although only sleep duration was investigated in the current study, the quality of sleep should also be measured and the causes of changes in sleep patterns should be identified in further studies to understand the influence of the pandemic on sleep and provide appropriate interventions.
Taken together, this study found that there were both positive and negative changes during the COVID-19 pandemic in adult women in Korea. Specifically, they perceived their subjective dental health more positively during the COVID-19 pandemic than before the COVID-19 pandemic, their exposure to secondhand smoke at work and in public places decreased, and their moderate-intensity work and leisure activities increased, while walking decreased, and sleep duration during the week increased. Therefore, it is necessary to provide guidelines for physical activities such as walking according to the severity of the pandemic so that appropriate physical activities can be performed even during the pandemic. It is also advised to encourage the maintenance of appropriate sleep duration through education on appropriate sleep duration and lack of sleep or oversleeping. In addition, in order to ensure that the positive changes caused by the pandemic, such as reduced exposure to secondhand smoke, are maintained, it is necessary to strengthen education on secondhand smoke and identify factors related to reduction in exposure to secondhand smoke to reflect in future health management policies.
This study has the following limitations. In this study, data from 2019 (before the COVID-19 pandemic) and 2020 (during the COVID-19 pandemic) were compared. Since only data from 1 year before and during the pandemic were compared, it is difficult to conclude that the observed changes were due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We suggest that a study comparing 2 years of data from before and during the COVID-19 pandemic should be conducted. In addition, this study only compared the observed differences before and during the COVID-19 pandemic without identifying the factors that caused these differences. Therefore, future studies should investigate factors related to the occurrence of these differences due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Lastly, this study did not take into account differences according to women’s life cycle, since all women aged 19 to 64 years were the study participants. Therefore, future research should explore differences by age group.