Department of Library Science, Archives and Information Systems, School of Social Sciences, International Hellenic University, P.O. BOX 141, GR-57400, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Int J Med Inform. 2021 Jun;150:104465. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2021.104465. Epub 2021 Apr 15.
The plethora of information in the contemporary digital age is enormous and beyond the capability of the average person to process all the information received. During the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, huge amount of information is increasingly available in digital information sources and overwhelms the average person. The purpose of this research was to investigate public's information seeking behavior on COVID-19 in Greece.
The study was conducted through a web-based survey, facilitated by the use of questionnaire posted on the Google Forms platform. The questionnaire consisted of closed-ended, 7-point Likert scale questions and multiple choice questions and was distributed to all over Greek Regions to almost 3.000 recipients, during the implementation of restrictive measures against the COVID-19 outbreak in Spring 2020. The data collected were subjected to a descriptive statistical analysis. The median was used to present the results. In order to perform analysis between genders, as well as age groups, the non-parametric criteria Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis were applied to determine the existence of differences in participants' beliefs.
Responses by 776 individuals were obtained. Individuals dedicated up to 2 h per day to be informed on COVID-19. Television, electronic press and news websites were reported by the participants as more reliable than social media, in obtaining information on COVID-19. Respondents paid attention to official sources of information (Ministry of Health, Civil Protection etc.). Family and friends played an additional role in the participants' information on COVID-19, while the personal doctor, other health workers and pharmacists did not appear to be most preferred sources of information on COVID-19. Participants' most common information seeking strategy in digital environment was keyword searching. Unreliable information, fake news and information overload were the most common difficulties that the participants encountered seeking information on COVID-19. The respondents' views seemed to differ significantly among age groups. The older the participants, the more often they were informed by television (p < 0.001) and the less often by the internet (p < 0.001). Females appear to use more frequently internet (p < 0.001) and social media (p = 0.001) out of habit and visit more often the Ministry of Health (p < 0.001) and the Civil Protection (p=0.005) websites, compared to males. Most of the participants seemed to worry about the fake news phenomenon and agreed that fake news on COVID-19 is being spread in the media and especially social networks.
The study revealed that, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greece, participants obtained information about the disease mainly by television, electronic press and news websites. On the contrary, the limited use of social media demonstrates the participants awareness of the spread of fake news on social media. This observed information seeking behavior might has contributed to individuals' acceptance of the necessary behavioral changes that had led to the Greek success story in preventing spread of the disease.
在当代数字时代,信息极其丰富,超出了普通人处理所有接收到的信息的能力。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,数字信息源中越来越多的信息可供使用,这让普通人不堪重负。本研究的目的是调查公众在希腊对 COVID-19 的信息搜索行为。
本研究通过基于网络的调查进行,使用发布在 Google 表单平台上的问卷来促进调查。问卷由封闭式、7 点李克特量表问题和多项选择题组成,在 2020 年春季实施针对 COVID-19 爆发的限制措施期间分发给希腊各地的近 3000 名收件人。收集的数据进行了描述性统计分析。中位数用于表示结果。为了分析性别和年龄组之间的差异,应用非参数标准曼-惠特尼 U 和克鲁斯卡尔-沃利斯检验来确定参与者的信仰是否存在差异。
共收到 776 人的回复。个人每天专门花 2 小时了解 COVID-19 信息。参与者报告称,在获取 COVID-19 信息方面,电视、电子新闻和新闻网站比社交媒体更可靠。受访者关注官方信息来源(卫生部、民防等)。家庭和朋友在参与者的 COVID-19 信息中发挥了额外的作用,而个人医生、其他卫生工作者和药剂师似乎并不是 COVID-19 信息的首选来源。参与者在数字环境中最常见的信息搜索策略是关键词搜索。不可靠的信息、假新闻和信息过载是参与者在搜索 COVID-19 信息时遇到的最常见困难。受访者的观点似乎在年龄组之间存在显著差异。参与者年龄越大,通过电视获取信息的频率越高(p<0.001),通过互联网获取信息的频率越低(p<0.001)。女性似乎出于习惯更频繁地使用互联网(p<0.001)和社交媒体(p=0.001),并且比男性更频繁地访问卫生部(p<0.001)和民防(p=0.005)网站。大多数参与者似乎对假新闻现象感到担忧,并同意 COVID-19 假新闻在媒体中传播,尤其是在社交媒体上。
本研究表明,在希腊 COVID-19 大流行期间,参与者主要通过电视、电子新闻和新闻网站获取有关该疾病的信息。相反,社交媒体的使用有限表明参与者意识到社交媒体上假新闻的传播。这种观察到的信息搜索行为可能有助于个人接受必要的行为改变,从而导致希腊在预防疾病传播方面取得成功。