Darker Catherine D, O'Connell Nicola, Dempster Martin, Graham Christopher D, O'Connor Cliodhna, Zgaga Lina, Nolan Ann, Tobin Katy, Brennan Niamh, Nicolson Gail, Burke Emma, Mather Luke, Crowley Philip, Scally Gabriel, Barry Joseph
Public Health and Primary Care, Institute of Population Health, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, D24 DH74, Ireland.
School of Psychology, Queen's University Belfast, 18-30 Malone Road, Belfast, BT9 5BN, UK.
HRB Open Res. 2021 Feb 15;3:48. doi: 10.12688/hrbopenres.13105.2. eCollection 2020.
COVID-19 represents a serious challenge to governments and healthcare systems. In addition to testing/contact tracing, behavioural and social responses such as handwashing and social distancing or cocooning are effective tools for mitigating the spread of the disease. Psychological (e.g., risk perceptions, self-efficacy) and contextual factors (government, public health messaging, etc.) are likely to drive these behaviours. Collated real-time information of these indicators strengthens local, national and international public health advice and messaging. Further, understanding how well public health and government messages and measures are understood, communicated via (social) media and adhered to is vital. There are two governments and public health jurisdictions on the island of Ireland, the Republic of Ireland (ROI) and Northern Ireland (NI). This represents an opportunity to explore implications of differing measures and messaging across these two jurisdictions as they relate to COVID-19 on two similar populations. The expert research team are drawn from a range of disciplines in the two countries. This project has four nested studies: Assessment of key behavioural, social and psychological factors through a large, prospective representative telephone survey of individuals aged over-18 on a weekly basis over eight weeks (n=3072); and conduct qualitative focus groups over the same period.Interrogation of social media messaging and formal media responses in both jurisdictions to investigate the spread of (mis)information.Modelling data from Studies 1 and 2, plotting the psychosocial/behavioural and media messaging information with international, ROI and NI incidence and mortality data. Conducting an assessment of health policy transfer in an attempt to incorporate the most significant public health and political insights from each jurisdiction. The CONTAIN project will develop an evidence-based toolbox for targeting public health messaging and political leadership and will be created for use for the anticipated second wave of COVID-19, and subsequently for future epidemics/pandemics.
新冠疫情给各国政府和医疗系统带来了严峻挑战。除了检测/接触者追踪外,诸如洗手、保持社交距离或自我隔离等行为和社会应对措施,是减缓疾病传播的有效手段。心理因素(如风险认知、自我效能感)和环境因素(政府、公共卫生信息等)可能会推动这些行为的发生。对这些指标进行实时信息整理,有助于加强地方、国家和国际层面的公共卫生建议及信息传播。此外,了解公众对公共卫生和政府信息及措施的理解程度、这些信息是如何通过(社交)媒体进行传播以及公众的遵守情况至关重要。爱尔兰岛有两个政府和公共卫生辖区,即爱尔兰共和国(ROI)和北爱尔兰(NI)。这为探讨这两个辖区针对新冠疫情在两个相似人群中采取的不同措施及信息传播所产生的影响提供了契机。专家研究团队来自两国的多个学科领域。该项目包含四项嵌套研究:通过对18岁以上人群进行为期八周的大规模前瞻性代表性电话调查(每周一次,n = 3072),评估关键行为、社会和心理因素;并在同一时期开展定性焦点小组研究。对两个辖区的社交媒体信息和官方媒体回应进行审查,以调查(错误)信息的传播情况。对研究1和研究2的数据进行建模,将心理社会/行为信息和媒体信息与国际、爱尔兰共和国和北爱尔兰的发病率及死亡率数据进行比对。对卫生政策转移进行评估,试图整合每个辖区最重要的公共卫生和政治见解。“遏制”项目将开发一个基于证据的工具箱,用于指导公共卫生信息传播和政治领导,并将用于应对预计的第二波新冠疫情,以及后续的未来流行病/大流行病。