Exploring Sub-Saharan Africa’s Communication of COVID-19-Related Health Information on Social Media

IF 0.8 4区 管理学 Q3 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
T. Asubiaro, Oluwole Badmus, U. Ikenyei, B. Popoola, E. Igwe
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract Social media presents a robust stage for disseminating time-sensitive information that is needed during a public health disease of global concern such as COVID-19. This study finds out how the 23 anglophone Sub-Saharan African countries’ national health ministries and infectious disease agencies disseminated COVID-19 related information through their social media accounts within the first three months after the declaration of COVID-19 as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. COVID-19 related qualitative and quantitative data types were collected from the social media accounts of the surveyed national health ministries and agencies for analysis. Over 86% of the African countries had presence on social media; Facebook was the most popular, though Twitter contained more posts. One of the credibility issues that was noticed is that most of the health ministries’ and agencies’ social media accounts were unverified and access to the social media accounts was not provided on most of their official websites. Information dissemination became more deliberate and increased significantly after the announcement of the fist cases of COVID-19 in the countries under review. Awareness creation, updates and news constituted the major categories of information that were disseminated, mostly in the form of derivative social media information before the announcement of the first COVID-19 case in the surveyed African countries. Campaigns against misinformation were barely undertaken by most of the countries. Strategies used by some countries included the employment of social media influencers and creation of content in local languages. Strategies that include development of health information content that targets different groups in African societies and the inclusion of elderly in the community and religious leaders as non-state actors in health information communication were recommended.
探索撒哈拉以南非洲在社交媒体上传播与covid -19相关的卫生信息
在COVID-19等全球关注的公共卫生疾病期间,社交媒体为传播时间敏感信息提供了一个强大的平台。该研究调查了撒哈拉以南非洲地区23个英语国家的卫生部和传染病机构在世界卫生组织宣布新冠肺炎大流行后的头三个月内,如何通过社交媒体账户传播新冠肺炎相关信息。从接受调查的国家卫生部和机构的社交媒体账户中收集与COVID-19相关的定性和定量数据类型进行分析。超过86%的非洲国家拥有社交媒体;Facebook是最受欢迎的,尽管Twitter上的帖子更多。人们注意到的一个可信度问题是,大多数卫生部和机构的社交媒体账户未经核实,大多数官方网站不提供访问社交媒体账户的服务。在受审查国家宣布第一例COVID-19病例后,信息传播变得更加深思熟虑,并显著增加。在被调查的非洲国家宣布第一例COVID-19病例之前,传播的主要信息类别是提高认识、更新和新闻,主要以衍生社交媒体信息的形式传播。大多数国家几乎没有开展反对虚假信息的运动。一些国家采用的战略包括雇用社交媒体影响者和用当地语言创作内容。建议制定战略,包括制定针对非洲社会不同群体的保健信息内容,以及将社区中的老年人和宗教领袖作为非国家行为者纳入保健信息传播。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Libri, International Journal of Libraries and Information Services, investigates the functions of libraries and information services from both a historical and present-day perspective and analyses the role of information in cultural, organizational, national and international developments. The periodical reports on current trends in librarianship worldwide and describes the transformation of libraries and information services resulting from the introduction of new information technologies and working methods. Background information and the latest research findings in librarianship and information science are made accessible to experts and a broader public. Articles are in English and conform to the highest academic standards.
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