This article describes patterns of compliance with social distancing measures among
the Spanish population during the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. It
identifies several factors associated with higher or lower compliance with recommended
measures of social distancing. This research is part of a 67-country study, titled
the International COVID-19 study on Social & Moral Psychology, in which we use a
Spanish dataset. Participants were residents in Spain aged 18 or above. The sample
comprises 1,090 respondents, weighted to be representative of the Spanish population.
Frequencies, correlations, bivariate analysis, and six models based on hierarchical
multiple regressions were applied. The main finding is that most Spaniards are compliant
with established guidelines of social distance during the pandemic (State of Alarm,
before May 2020). Variables associated more with lower levels of compliance with
these standards were explored. Six hierarchical multiple regression models found that
compliance with social distance measures has a multifactorial explanation (R
2 between
20.4 and 49.1%). Sociodemographic factors, personal hygiene patterns, and the
interaction between personal hygiene patterns and the support for political measures
related to the coronavirus brought significant effects on the regression models. Less
compliance was also associated with beliefs in some specific conspiracy theories with
regard to COVID-19 or general conspiracy mentality (Conspiracy Mentality Questionnaire,
CMQ), consumption patterns of traditional mass media (television, paper newspapers,
magazines, and radio) and modern means to get informed (online digital newspapers,
blogs, and social networks), political ideology, vote, trust in institutions, and political
identification. Among the future lines of action in preventing the possible outbreak of
the virus, we suggest measures to reinforce trust in official information, mainly linked to
reducing the influence of disinformation and conspiracy theories parallel to the pandemic.