Department of Anesthesiology, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
Laboratory of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, National-Local Joint Engineering Research Centre of Translational Medicine of Anesthesiology, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2022 May 31;8(5):e33577. doi: 10.2196/33577.
As social media platforms have become significant sources of information during the pandemic, a significant volume of both factual and inaccurate information related to the prevention of COVID-19 has been disseminated through social media. Thus, disparities in COVID-19 information verification across populations have the potential to promote the dissemination of misinformation among clustered groups of people with similar characteristics.
This study aimed to identify the characteristics of social media users who obtained COVID-19 information through unofficial social media accounts and were (1) most likely to change their health behaviors according to web-based information and (2) least likely to actively verify the accuracy of COVID-19 information, as these individuals may be susceptible to inaccurate prevention measures and may exacerbate transmission.
An online questionnaire consisting of 17 questions was disseminated by West China Hospital via its official online platforms, between May 18, 2020, and May 31, 2020. The questionnaire collected the sociodemographic information of 14,509 adults, and included questions surveying Chinese netizens' knowledge about COVID-19, personal social media use, health behavioral change tendencies, and cross-verification behaviors for web-based information during the pandemic. Multiple stepwise regression models were used to examine the relationships between social media use, behavior changes, and information cross-verification.
Respondents who were most likely to change their health behaviors after obtaining web-based COVID-19 information from celebrity sources had the following characteristics: female sex (P=.004), age ≥50 years (P=.009), higher COVID-19 knowledge and health literacy (P=.045 and P=.03, respectively), non-health care professional (P=.02), higher frequency of searching on social media (P<.001), better health conditions (P<.001), and a trust rating score of more than 3 for information released by celebrities on social media (P=.005). Furthermore, among participants who were most likely to change their health behaviors according to social media information released by celebrities, female sex (P<.001), living in a rural residence rather than first-tier city (P<.001), self-reported medium health status and lower health care literacy (P=.007 and P<.001, respectively), less frequent search for COVID-19 information on social media (P<.001), and greater level of trust toward celebrities' social media accounts with a trust rating score greater than 1 (P≤.04) were associated with a lack of cross-verification of information.
The findings suggest that governments, health care agencies, celebrities, and technicians should combine their efforts to decrease the risk in vulnerable groups that are inclined to change health behaviors according to web-based information but do not perform any fact-check verification of the accuracy of the unofficial information. Specifically, it is necessary to correct the false information related to COVID-19 on social media, appropriately apply celebrities' star power, and increase Chinese netizens' awareness of information cross-verification and eHealth literacy for evaluating the veracity of web-based information.
随着社交媒体平台在大流行期间成为重要的信息来源,大量与 COVID-19 预防相关的事实和不准确信息已通过社交媒体传播。因此,不同人群对 COVID-19 信息验证的差异有可能促进具有相似特征的人群中错误信息的传播。
本研究旨在确定通过非官方社交媒体账户获取 COVID-19 信息的社交媒体用户的特征,这些用户(1)最有可能根据网络信息改变他们的健康行为,以及(2)最不可能主动验证 COVID-19 信息的准确性,因为这些人可能容易受到不准确的预防措施的影响,并可能加剧传播。
2020 年 5 月 18 日至 5 月 31 日,华西医院通过其官方在线平台发布了一份包含 17 个问题的在线问卷。该问卷收集了 14509 名成年人的社会人口学信息,包括调查中国网民对 COVID-19 的知识、个人社交媒体使用、健康行为改变倾向以及大流行期间网络信息交叉验证的问题。采用多步回归模型来检验社交媒体使用、行为改变和信息交叉验证之间的关系。
从名人来源的网络上获得 COVID-19 信息后最有可能改变健康行为的受访者具有以下特征:女性(P=.004),年龄≥50 岁(P=.009),较高的 COVID-19 知识和健康素养(P=.045 和 P=.03,分别),非医疗保健专业人员(P=.02),更高的社交媒体搜索频率(P<.001),更好的健康状况(P<.001),以及对社交媒体上名人发布的信息的信任评分超过 3 分(P=.005)。此外,在根据名人在社交媒体上发布的信息最有可能改变健康行为的参与者中,女性(P<.001),居住在农村而不是一线城市(P<.001),自我报告的中等健康状况和较低的医疗保健素养(P=.007 和 P<.001,分别),社交媒体上对 COVID-19 信息的搜索频率较低(P<.001),以及对信任评分超过 1 分的名人社交媒体账户的信任程度较高(P≤.04),这些特征与对信息的交叉验证不足有关。
研究结果表明,政府、医疗保健机构、名人和技术人员应共同努力,降低倾向于根据网络信息改变健康行为但不进行非官方信息准确性核实的弱势群体的风险。具体来说,有必要纠正社交媒体上与 COVID-19 相关的虚假信息,适当地利用名人的明星效应,提高中国网民对网络信息交叉验证和电子健康素养的认识,以评估网络信息的真实性。