
Nationality and Perception of Factors Impacting Decisions to Attend the Olympic Games Before and After COVID-19
Author(s) -
Bonnie Tiell
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
sport şi societate
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2344-3693
pISSN - 1582-2168
DOI - 10.36836/2020/1/11
Subject(s) - terrorism , context (archaeology) , china , pandemic , covid-19 , zika virus , geography , perception , political science , socioeconomics , economic growth , criminology , environmental health , psychology , medicine , sociology , law , economics , virus , disease , archaeology , pathology , virology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , neuroscience
The global pandemic caused by the spread of the COVID-19 virus in 2020 has impacted the sports industry in unprecedented ways that will remain at the forefront of how practitioners organize, market, and operate live sport events at every level. A study assessing nine factors impacting a decision to attend the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil found that the fear of contracting the zika viruswas the leadingconcernfor citizens born in the United States (U.S.) while citizens from Chinaranked terrorism, riots, and street violence higher than zika. The nine factors were categorized into three clusters representing 1) environmental health concerns (e.g., zika virus and water contamination), 2) safety and security risks (e.g., terrorism, street crime, riots), and 3) personal issues (e.g., lack of time/finances, no passport, health issues, and unknown factors). A significant difference (p < .05) was found in the combined mean scores of natural citizens from the U.S. and China for each cluster.The study sparks inquiry into whether a significant difference would still exist between Chinese and U.S. citizens’perceptions ofwhether environmental health factors impact decisionsto attend the Olympics if COVID-19 replaced the zika virus and the context applied to the 2020 Games in Tokyo which were postponed until 2021