University of California, Irvine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Orange, California.
West J Emerg Med. 2023 Feb 27;24(2):264-268. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2023.1.57253.
Public health efforts to reduce the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have been plagued by vaccine hesitancy and misinformation. Social media has contributed to spreading misinformation by creating online environments where people find information or opinions that reinforce their own. Combating misinformation online will be essential to prevent and manage the spread of COVID-19. It is of particular urgency to understand and address misinformation and vaccine hesitancy among essential workers, such as healthcare workers, because of their frequent interactions with and influence upon the general population. Using data from an online community pilot randomized controlled trial designed to increase requests for COVID-19 vaccine information among frontline essential workers, we explored the topics discussed on the online community related to COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination to better understand current misinformation and vaccine hesitancy.
For the trial, 120 participants and 12 peer leaders were recruited through online advertisements to join a private, hidden Facebook group. The study consisted of an intervention and control arm, each with two groups of 30 randomized participants each. Peer leaders were only randomized into one of the intervention-arm groups. Peer leaders were tasked with engaging the participants throughout the study. Posts and comments of only participants were coded manually by the research team. Chi-squared tests assessed differences in the frequency and content of posts between intervention and control arms.
We found significant differences in the numbers of posts and comments focused on topics of general community, misinformation, and social support between intervention and control arms (6.88% vs 19.05% focused on misinformation, respectively, (P <0.001); 11.88% vs 1.90% focused on social support, respectively, (P <0.001); and 46.88% vs 62.86% focused on general community (P <0.001)).
Results suggest that peer-led online community groups may help to reduce the spread of misinformation and aid public health efforts in our fight against COVID-19.
公共卫生部门为减少 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的传播而做出的努力一直受到疫苗犹豫和错误信息的困扰。社交媒体通过创造人们可以找到强化其自身观点或信息的在线环境,促成了错误信息的传播。在线打击错误信息对于预防和管理 COVID-19 的传播至关重要。了解和解决医疗工作者等一线基本工作人员的错误信息和疫苗犹豫问题尤为紧迫,因为他们经常与公众互动并对公众产生影响。利用一项旨在提高一线基本工作人员对 COVID-19 疫苗信息的请求量的在线社区试点随机对照试验的数据,我们探讨了与 COVID-19 和 COVID-19 疫苗接种相关的在线社区讨论的主题,以更好地了解当前的错误信息和疫苗犹豫。
在试验中,通过在线广告招募了 120 名参与者和 12 名同行领导者加入一个私人的隐藏 Facebook 群组。研究包括一个干预组和一个对照组,每个组有 30 名随机参与者。同行领导者仅随机分配到干预组的一组。同行领导者的任务是在整个研究期间与参与者互动。研究团队手动对参与者的帖子和评论进行了编码。卡方检验评估了干预组和对照组之间帖子数量和内容的差异。
我们发现干预组和对照组之间在关注一般社区、错误信息和社会支持的主题的帖子和评论数量上存在显著差异(分别为 6.88%和 19.05%关注错误信息,(P<0.001);11.88%和 1.90%关注社会支持,(P<0.001);46.88%和 62.86%关注一般社区,(P<0.001))。
结果表明,同行领导的在线社区小组可能有助于减少错误信息的传播,并在我们对抗 COVID-19 的斗争中帮助公共卫生部门。