癌症治疗误导和建议的接触与反应:调查研究。

IF 3.3 Q2 ONCOLOGY
JMIR Cancer Pub Date : 2023-07-28 DOI:10.2196/43749
Allison J Lazard, Sydney Nicolla, Rhyan N Vereen, Shanetta Pendleton, Marjory Charlot, Hung-Jui Tan, Dominic DiFranzo, Marlyn Pulido, Nabarun Dasgupta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在社交媒体上,癌症治疗误导信息或有关替代疗法的虚假说法往往比真实信息传播得更快更远。癌症治疗误导信息会对癌症患者及其癌症护理网络的社会心理和身体健康造成伤害,因为这些误导信息会给人们带来困扰,鼓励人们放弃支持,从而可能导致偏离循证护理。我们迫切需要了解癌症治疗误导信息是如何被分享的,并找出减少误导信息的方法:我们旨在更好地了解人们对癌症治疗误导信息的接触和反应,包括研究参与者进行亲社会干预的意愿及其分享含有癌症治疗误导信息的 Instagram 帖子的意图:我们于 2021 年 12 月对美国成年人进行了一项关于癌症治疗误导信息的调查。参与者报告了他们对癌症治疗误导信息的一般接触和反应(看到或听到、来源、建议类型和好奇心),以及在社交媒体上的具体接触和反应(平台、可信度)。然后,参与者被随机分配浏览 3 个癌症治疗误导信息帖子中的 1 个或一个信息帖子,并被要求报告他们进行亲社会干预的意愿和分享的意愿:在美国成年人参与者(人数=603;平均年龄 46 岁,标准差 18.83 岁)中,包括癌症患者和癌症护理者,几乎每 4 人中就有 1 人(142/603,23.5%)收到过关于治疗或治愈癌症的替代方法的建议。建议主要是通过家人(39.4%)和朋友(37.3%)分享的,涉及消化道疗法(30.3%)和自然疗法(14.1%),这引起了大多数接受者(106/142,74.6%)的好奇。一半以上的参与者(337/603,55.9%)在社交媒体上看到过任何癌症治疗误导信息,其中癌症患者(53/109,70.6%)的接触率明显高于非癌症患者(89/494,52.6%;PConclusions:美国成年人通过社交媒体,包括广泛使用的支持平台,接触到癌症治疗的错误信息。许多人认为社交媒体上关于癌症替代治疗的帖子至少在某些时候是真实的。美国成年人(包括癌症患者和易感人群成员)愿意进行亲社会干预,如果能配合帮助个人辨别虚假说法的策略,就能发起必要的社区行动,减少癌症治疗误导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Exposure and Reactions to Cancer Treatment Misinformation and Advice: Survey Study.

Exposure and Reactions to Cancer Treatment Misinformation and Advice: Survey Study.

Background: Cancer treatment misinformation, or false claims about alternative cures, often spreads faster and farther than true information on social media. Cancer treatment misinformation can harm the psychosocial and physical health of individuals with cancer and their cancer care networks by causing distress and encouraging people to abandon support, potentially leading to deviations from evidence-based care. There is a pressing need to understand how cancer treatment misinformation is shared and uncover ways to reduce misinformation.

Objective: We aimed to better understand exposure and reactions to cancer treatment misinformation, including the willingness of study participants to prosocially intervene and their intentions to share Instagram posts with cancer treatment misinformation.

Methods: We conducted a survey on cancer treatment misinformation among US adults in December 2021. Participants reported their exposure and reactions to cancer treatment misinformation generally (saw or heard, source, type of advice, and curiosity) and specifically on social media (platform, believability). Participants were then randomly assigned to view 1 of 3 cancer treatment misinformation posts or an information post and asked to report their willingness to prosocially intervene and their intentions to share.

Results: Among US adult participants (N=603; mean age 46, SD 18.83 years), including those with cancer and cancer caregivers, almost 1 in 4 (142/603, 23.5%) received advice about alternative ways to treat or cure cancer. Advice was primarily shared through family (39.4%) and friends (37.3%) for digestive (30.3%) and natural (14.1%) alternative cancer treatments, which generated curiosity among most recipients (106/142, 74.6%). More than half of participants (337/603, 55.9%) saw any cancer treatment misinformation on social media, with significantly higher exposure for those with cancer (53/109, 70.6%) than for those without cancer (89/494, 52.6%; P<.001). Participants saw cancer misinformation on Facebook (39.8%), YouTube (27%), Instagram (22.1%), and TikTok (14.1%), among other platforms. Participants (429/603, 71.1%) thought cancer treatment misinformation was true, at least sometimes, on social media. More than half (357/603, 59.2%) were likely to share any cancer misinformation posts shown. Many participants (412/603, 68.3%) were willing to prosocially intervene for any cancer misinformation posts, including flagging the cancer treatment misinformation posts as false (49.7%-51.4%) or reporting them to the platform (48.1%-51.4%). Among the participants, individuals with cancer and those who identified as Black or Hispanic reported greater willingness to intervene to reduce cancer misinformation but also higher intentions to share misinformation.

Conclusions: Cancer treatment misinformation reaches US adults through social media, including on widely used platforms for support. Many believe that social media posts about alternative cancer treatment are true at least some of the time. The willingness of US adults, including those with cancer and members of susceptible populations, to prosocially intervene could initiate the necessary community action to reduce cancer treatment misinformation if coupled with strategies to help individuals discern false claims.

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来源期刊
JMIR Cancer
JMIR Cancer ONCOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
12 weeks
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