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新冠疫情期间美国社交网站用户在社交媒体上的健康信息搜索行为:调查研究

Health Information Seeking Behaviors on Social Media During the COVID-19 Pandemic Among American Social Networking Site Users: Survey Study.

作者信息

Neely Stephen, Eldredge Christina, Sanders Ron

机构信息

School of Public Affairs, College of Arts and Sciences, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.

School of Information, College of Arts and Sciences, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.

出版信息

J Med Internet Res. 2021 Jun 11;23(6):e29802. doi: 10.2196/29802.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

In recent years, medical journals have emphasized the increasingly critical role that social media plays in the dissemination of public health information and disease prevention guidelines. However, platforms such as Facebook and Twitter continue to pose unique challenges for clinical health care providers and public health officials alike. In order to effectively communicate during public health emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, it is increasingly critical for health care providers and public health officials to understand how patients gather health-related information on the internet and adjudicate the merits of such information.

OBJECTIVE

With that goal in mind, we conducted a survey of 1003 US-based adults to better understand how health consumers have used social media to learn and stay informed about the COVID-19 pandemic, the extent to which they have relied on credible scientific information sources, and how they have gone about fact-checking pandemic-related information.

METHODS

A web-based survey was conducted with a sample that was purchased through an industry-leading market research provider. The results were reported with a 95% confidence level and a margin of error of 3. Participants included 1003 US-based adults (aged ≥18 years). Participants were selected via a stratified quota sampling approach to ensure that the sample was representative of the US population. Balanced quotas were determined (by region of the country) for gender, age, race, and ethnicity.

RESULTS

The results showed a heavy reliance on social media during the COVID-19 pandemic; more than three-quarters of respondents (762/1003, 76%) reported that they have relied on social media at least "a little," and 59.2% (594/1003) of respondents indicated that they read information about COVID-19 on social media at least once per week. According to the findings, most social media users (638/1003, 63.6%) were unlikely to fact-check what they see on the internet with a health professional, despite the high levels of mistrust in the accuracy of COVID-19-related information on social media. We also found a greater likelihood of undergoing vaccination among those following more credible scientific sources on social media during the pandemic (χ=50.790; φ=0.258; P<.001).

CONCLUSIONS

The findings suggest that health professionals will need to be both strategic and proactive when engaging with health consumers on social media if they hope to counteract the deleterious effects of misinformation and disinformation. Effective training, institutional support, and proactive collaboration can help health professionals adapt to the evolving patterns of health information seeking.

摘要

背景

近年来,医学期刊强调了社交媒体在传播公共卫生信息和疾病预防指南方面日益关键的作用。然而,脸书和推特等平台继续给临床医疗服务提供者和公共卫生官员带来独特的挑战。为了在诸如新冠疫情等公共卫生紧急情况期间有效沟通,医疗服务提供者和公共卫生官员越来越有必要了解患者如何在互联网上收集健康相关信息并评判此类信息的价值。

目的

出于该目标,我们对1003名美国成年人进行了一项调查,以更好地了解健康消费者如何利用社交媒体了解并持续关注新冠疫情,他们在多大程度上依赖可靠的科学信息来源,以及他们如何对与疫情相关的信息进行事实核查。

方法

通过一家行业领先的市场研究供应商购买样本进行了一项基于网络的调查。结果以95%的置信水平和3%的误差幅度进行报告。参与者包括1003名美国成年人(年龄≥18岁)。参与者通过分层配额抽样方法选取,以确保样本代表美国人口。确定了(按美国地区划分)性别、年龄、种族和民族的平衡配额。

结果

结果显示在新冠疫情期间人们严重依赖社交媒体;超过四分之三的受访者(762/1003,76%)报告称他们至少“有点”依赖社交媒体,59.2%(594/1003)的受访者表示他们每周至少在社交媒体上阅读一次有关新冠疫情的信息。根据调查结果,尽管大多数人对社交媒体上与新冠疫情相关信息的准确性不信任,但大多数社交媒体用户(638/1003,63.6%)不太可能就他们在网上看到的内容向健康专业人士进行事实核查。我们还发现,在疫情期间,那些在社交媒体上关注更可靠科学来源的人接种疫苗的可能性更大(χ=50.790;φ=0.258;P<.001)。

结论

研究结果表明,如果健康专业人士希望抵消错误信息和虚假信息的有害影响,那么他们在社交媒体上与健康消费者互动时需要既具有策略性又积极主动。有效的培训、机构支持和积极的合作可以帮助健康专业人士适应不断变化的健康信息搜索模式。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/fb33/8202660/b5091bed65ee/jmir_v23i6e29802_fig1.jpg

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