Malik Ammara, Bashir Faiza, Mahmood Khalid
University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan.
Government Graduate College for Women, Township, Lahore, Pakistan.
Sage Open. 2023 Jan 16;13(1):21582440221147022. doi: 10.1177/21582440221147022. eCollection 2023 Jan-Mar.
Misinformation has been existed for centuries, though emerge as a severe concern in the age of social media, and particularly during COVID-19 global pandemic. As the pandemic approached, a massive influx of mixed quality data appeared on social media, which had adverse effects on society. This study highlights the possible factors contributing to the sharing and spreading misinformation through social media during the crisis. Preferred Reporting Items and Meta-Analysis guidelines were used for systematic review. Anxiety or risk perception associated with COVID-19 was one of the significant motivators for misinformation sharing, followed by entertainment, information seeking, sociability, social tie strength, self-promotion, trust in science, self-efficacy, and altruism. WhatsApp and Facebook were the most used platforms for spreading rumors and misinformation. The results indicated five significant factors associated with COVID-19 misinformation sharing on social media, including socio-demographic characteristics, financial considerations, political affiliation or interest, conspiracy ideation, and religious factors. Misinformation sharing could have profound consequences for individual and society and impeding the efforts of government and health institutions to manage the crisis. This SLR focuses solely on quantitative studies, hence, studies are overlooked from a qualitative standpoint. Furthermore, this study only looked at the predictors of misinformation sharing behavior during COVID-19. It did not look into the factors that could curb the sharing of misinformation on social media platforms as a whole. The study's findings will help the public, in general, to be cautious about sharing misinformation, and the health care workers, and institutions, in particular, for devising strategies and measures to reduce the flow of misinformation by releasing credible information through concerned official social media accounts. The findings will be valuable for health professionals and government agencies to devise strategies for handling misinformation during public health emergencies.
错误信息已经存在了几个世纪,尽管在社交媒体时代才成为一个严重问题,尤其是在新冠疫情全球大流行期间。随着疫情的临近,大量质量参差不齐的数据出现在社交媒体上,这对社会产生了不利影响。本研究强调了在危机期间可能导致通过社交媒体分享和传播错误信息的因素。采用系统评价优先报告条目和Meta分析指南。与新冠疫情相关的焦虑或风险认知是错误信息分享的重要动机之一,其次是娱乐、信息寻求、社交性、社会联系强度、自我推销、对科学的信任、自我效能感和利他主义。WhatsApp和Facebook是传播谣言和错误信息最常用的平台。结果表明,与社交媒体上新冠疫情错误信息分享相关的五个重要因素,包括社会人口特征、经济考量、政治派别或兴趣、阴谋论思维和宗教因素。错误信息的分享可能对个人和社会产生深远影响,并阻碍政府和卫生机构应对危机的努力。本系统文献综述仅关注定量研究,因此,从定性角度来看,一些研究被忽视了。此外,本研究仅考察了新冠疫情期间错误信息分享行为的预测因素。它没有研究能够从整体上抑制社交媒体平台上错误信息分享的因素。该研究的结果总体上有助于公众在分享错误信息时保持谨慎,尤其有助于医护人员和机构制定策略和措施,通过相关官方社交媒体账号发布可靠信息来减少错误信息的传播。这些发现对于卫生专业人员和政府机构在公共卫生紧急情况下制定处理错误信息的策略将具有重要价值。