University of Alberta, Faculty of Nursing, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Black Physicians of Ontario, University of Ontario, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Glob Health. 2022 Jul 23;12:05026. doi: 10.7189/jogh.12.05026.
Mis/disinformation has reached an epidemic level with the COVID-19 virus and can be largely attributed to the growing digitalization of information and its rapid transmission via social media. Approximately 96% of Canadians and 80% of Americans report encountering COVID-19 dis/misinformation on at least one social media site/app. COVID-19 dis/misinformation promotes scepticism and a lack of confidence in COVID-19 interventions. Black people have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in terms of negative impacts on their livelihoods and are also more likely to be hesitant to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Dis/misinformation contributes to high rates of COVID-19 infection and low uptake of COVID-19 vaccination. Hence, the purpose of this scoping review was to map out the nature and extent of current research on COVID-19 disinformation among Blacks in Africa and the African diaspora.
We searched and reviewed articles from major databases such as MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL. Our search strategy involved the following concepts: 1) COVID-19, including variants; 2) misinformation, conspiracy theories, and fake news, and modes of misinformation transmission such as social media; and 3) Blacks or people of African descent, or the African diaspora. We retrieved 600 articles that were independently screened by two researchers. We included studies focusing on 1) Black people living inside or outside Africa; and 2) COVID-19 online dis/misinformation among this population. A total of 19 studies fit our inclusion criteria. We used a thematic analysis to analyse qualitative data.
Our findings indicate Black people are accessing and often sharing online disinformation and misinformation primarily through social media platforms such as WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram. Dis/misinformation concerns the origin of COVID-19, transmission, prevention, and treatment of COVID-19, assertions of race immunity to the virus, distrust in government and health organizations, and intervention research and programming.
There is a global paucity of literature addressing COVID-19 online dis/misinformation among Black people. Dis/misinformation can fuel vaccine hesitancy and threaten the goal of herd immunity. Knowledge of the impact and implications of COVID-19 online dis/misinformation is necessary to inform public health interventions in Black communities.
随着 COVID-19 病毒的出现,错误信息已达到流行水平,这主要归因于信息的数字化以及通过社交媒体的快速传播。大约 96%的加拿大人和 80%的美国人报告在至少一个社交媒体网站/应用程序上遇到过 COVID-19 错误/虚假信息。COVID-19 错误/虚假信息助长了对 COVID-19 干预措施的怀疑和缺乏信心。在 COVID-19 对生计的负面影响方面,黑人受到的影响不成比例,而且他们也更不愿意接种 COVID-19 疫苗。错误/虚假信息导致 COVID-19 感染率高,COVID-19 疫苗接种率低。因此,本范围综述的目的是绘制目前在非洲和非裔散居地的黑人群体中 COVID-19 错误信息的性质和程度。
我们搜索并审查了来自 MEDLINE、EMBASE 和 CINAHL 等主要数据库的文章。我们的搜索策略涉及以下概念:1)COVID-19,包括变体;2)错误信息、阴谋论和假新闻,以及错误信息传播的模式,如社交媒体;3)黑人或非洲裔人,或非裔散居地。我们检索了 600 篇文章,由两名研究人员独立筛选。我们纳入了关注以下内容的研究:1)生活在非洲内外的黑人;2)该人群中 COVID-19 的在线错误/虚假信息。共有 19 项研究符合我们的纳入标准。我们使用主题分析对定性数据进行分析。
我们的研究结果表明,黑人正在访问并经常通过社交媒体平台(如 WhatsApp、Facebook、Twitter、YouTube 和 Instagram)分享在线错误信息和虚假信息。错误信息和虚假信息涉及 COVID-19 的起源、传播、预防和治疗、对病毒的种族免疫断言、对政府和卫生组织的不信任以及干预研究和方案。
全球范围内针对黑人群体中 COVID-19 在线错误信息的文献很少。错误信息和虚假信息可能会助长疫苗犹豫,并威胁群体免疫目标。了解 COVID-19 在线错误信息和虚假信息的影响和意义对于告知黑人群体的公共卫生干预措施是必要的。