Department of Psychology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China.
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, California, USA.
Gerontologist. 2021 Feb 23;61(2):187-195. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnaa222.
Older adults might be less information-seeking in comparison to younger adults. Yet, when a crisis hits, rather than relying on only a few information sources, it is important for people to gather information from a variety of different sources. With more information sources, people are more likely to obtain a more realistic perception of the situation and engagement of health behaviors. This study examined the association between age and information-seeking patterns, and how information-seeking patterns influenced worry about coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and protective measures taken during the pandemic.
This study was conducted from March to May 2020. Ninety younger adults and 105 older adults were recruited in a 21-day daily diary study. Participants reported the types of sources where they received COVID-19-related information, worry from these information sources and protective health behaviors performed each day. Multilevel serial mediation analysis was performed.
Concurrent and time-lagged analyses both revealed that older adults received information from more sources, and more frequently from traditional (e.g., newspaper and TV) and interpersonal sources (e.g., information shared by friends and families), than did younger adults. When receiving information from more sources, older adults were more worried about COVID-19 and performed more protective health behaviors.
These results demonstrated the utility of having more information sources in the context of a public health crisis and offered suggestions for future public communication and community engagement.
与年轻人相比,老年人的信息搜索行为可能较少。然而,当危机来临时,人们重要的是要从各种不同的来源收集信息,而不是仅仅依赖少数几个信息来源。有了更多的信息来源,人们更有可能对情况有更现实的认识,并采取健康行为。本研究考察了年龄与信息搜索模式之间的关系,以及信息搜索模式如何影响对 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的担忧和大流行期间采取的保护措施。
本研究于 2020 年 3 月至 5 月进行。在 21 天的日常日记研究中,招募了 90 名年轻成年人和 105 名老年成年人。参与者报告了他们从哪些来源获得 COVID-19 相关信息、从这些信息来源中产生的担忧以及每天采取的保护健康行为。进行了多层次的序列中介分析。
并发和时滞分析都表明,老年人从更多的来源获得信息,并且更频繁地从传统来源(如报纸和电视)和人际来源(如朋友和家人分享的信息)获得信息,而年轻人则不然。当从更多的来源获取信息时,老年人对 COVID-19 的担忧程度更高,采取的保护健康行为也更多。
这些结果表明,在公共卫生危机背景下,拥有更多信息来源具有实用性,并为未来的公共传播和社区参与提供了建议。