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A Public Health Research Agenda for Managing Infodemics: Methods and Results of the First WHO Infodemiology Conference (Preprint)

Authors :
Neville Calleja
AbdelHalim AbdAllah
Neetu Abad
Naglaa Ahmed
Dolores Albarracin
Elena Altieri
Julienne N Anoko
Ruben Arcos
Arina Anis Azlan
Judit Bayer
Anja Bechmann
Supriya Bezbaruah
Sylvie C Briand
Ian Brooks
Lucie M Bucci
Stefano Burzo
Christine Czerniak
Manlio De Domenico
Adam G Dunn
Ullrich K H Ecker
Laura Espinosa
Camille Francois
Kacper Gradon
Anatoliy Gruzd
Beste Sultan Gülgün
Rustam Haydarov
Cherstyn Hurley
Santi Indra Astuti
Atsuyoshi Ishizumi
Neil Johnson
Dylan Johnson Restrepo
Masato Kajimoto
Aybüke Koyuncu
Shibani Kulkarni
Jaya Lamichhane
Rosamund Lewis
Avichal Mahajan
Ahmed Mandil
Erin McAweeney
Melanie Messer
Wesley Moy
Patricia Ndumbi Ngamala
Tim Nguyen
Mark Nunn
Saad B Omer
Claudia Pagliari
Palak Patel
Lynette Phuong
Dimitri Prybylski
Arash Rashidian
Emily Rempel
Sara Rubinelli
PierLuigi Sacco
Anton Schneider
Kai Shu
Melanie Smith
Harry Sufehmi
Viroj Tangcharoensathien
Robert Terry
Naveen Thacker
Tom Trewinnard
Shannon Turner
Heidi Tworek
Saad Uakkas
Emily Vraga
Claire Wardle
Herman Wasserman
Elisabeth Wilhelm
Andrea Würz
Brian Yau
Lei Zhou
Tina D Purnat
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
JMIR Publications Inc., 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND An infodemic is an overflow of information of varying quality that surges across digital and physical environments during an acute public health event. It leads to confusion, risk-taking, and behaviors that can harm health and lead to erosion of trust in health authorities and public health responses. Owing to the global scale and high stakes of the health emergency, responding to the infodemic related to the pandemic is particularly urgent. Building on diverse research disciplines and expanding the discipline of infodemiology, more evidence-based interventions are needed to design infodemic management interventions and tools and implement them by health emergency responders. OBJECTIVE The World Health Organization organized the first global infodemiology conference, entirely online, during June and July 2020, with a follow-up process from August to October 2020, to review current multidisciplinary evidence, interventions, and practices that can be applied to the COVID-19 infodemic response. This resulted in the creation of a public health research agenda for managing infodemics. METHODS As part of the conference, a structured expert judgment synthesis method was used to formulate a public health research agenda. A total of 110 participants represented diverse scientific disciplines from over 35 countries and global public health implementing partners. The conference used a laddered discussion sprint methodology by rotating participant teams, and a managed follow-up process was used to assemble a research agenda based on the discussion and structured expert feedback. This resulted in a five-workstream frame of the research agenda for infodemic management and 166 suggested research questions. The participants then ranked the questions for feasibility and expected public health impact. The expert consensus was summarized in a public health research agenda that included a list of priority research questions. RESULTS The public health research agenda for infodemic management has five workstreams: (1) measuring and continuously monitoring the impact of infodemics during health emergencies; (2) detecting signals and understanding the spread and risk of infodemics; (3) responding and deploying interventions that mitigate and protect against infodemics and their harmful effects; (4) evaluating infodemic interventions and strengthening the resilience of individuals and communities to infodemics; and (5) promoting the development, adaptation, and application of interventions and toolkits for infodemic management. Each workstream identifies research questions and highlights 49 high priority research questions. CONCLUSIONS Public health authorities need to develop, validate, implement, and adapt tools and interventions for managing infodemics in acute public health events in ways that are appropriate for their countries and contexts. Infodemiology provides a scientific foundation to make this possible. This research agenda proposes a structured framework for targeted investment for the scientific community, policy makers, implementing organizations, and other stakeholders to consider.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ecc92f51f9e786dcb785df1bb163ee86