Health TrueInfo:一款多语言安卓应用和社交媒体方法,用于解决玻利维亚、印度和加拿大的COVID-19疫苗错误信息和犹豫

Sapolnach Prompiengchai, Neda Maki, Mahika Jain, Libertad Rojas, Jaiditya Dev, Thushanth Sriskandarajah
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For instance, to better comprehend how misinformation plays a role in increasing vaccine hesitancy among the Indigenous Quechua peoples in Bolivia, we collaborated with a Quechua social media influencer, who helped us create a skit inspired by the current local misinformation. Likewise, we have asked other stakeholders in healthcare like local teenagers, frontline doctors, and health experts to help create content addressing their respective communities. The knowledge translation strategies utilized here were to contextualize information, appeal to potential vaccine-hesitant groups, and use community engagement strategies like involving influencers to help us reach specific demographic groups and overcome linguistic and cultural barriers (Bella et al., 2021). One way to quantitatively estimate the impact of the project is through social media analytics. 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S., Oh, A., & Klein, W. M. P. (2018). Addressing Health-Related Misinformation on Social Media. Jama, 320(23), 2417-2418. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2018.16865\nLa Bella, E., Allen, C., & Lirussi, F. (2021). Communication vs evidence: What hinders the outreach of science during an infodemic? A narrative review. Integrative Medicine Research, 10(4), 100731. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imr.2021.100731\nLoomba, S., de Figueiredo, A., Piatek, S. J., de Graaf, K., & Larson, H. J. (2021). Measuring the impact of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation on vaccination intent in the UK and USA. Nature Human Behaviour, 5(3), 337-348. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01056-1\nSuarez-Lledo, V., & Alvarez-Galvez, J. (2021). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19疫苗的错误信息助长了对疫苗的犹豫,这是降低疫苗接种率的主要因素之一(Loomba et al., 2021)。疫苗犹豫的增加,特别是在脆弱社区中,将加剧COVID-19已经不堪重负的经济和健康负担。Health TrueInfo的目的是利用知识翻译策略,通过社交媒体实施基于证据的卫生传播,以解决玻利维亚、印度和加拿大弱势群体中关于COVID-19疫苗的错误信息和犹豫不决的问题。“健康真实信息”倡议与卫生专家和社区成员合作,要求他们制作视听材料,向他们的社区传达强有力的、与文化相关的信息。这些内容打击了当地的错误信息,并鼓励接种疫苗。然后将视听内容上传到我们的多语种Android应用程序以及Twitter、Facebook、Instagram和LinkedIn等社交媒体平台。利用社交媒体解决错误信息的概念是从系统综述中获得的,强调了卫生组织打击普遍错误信息的潜力,因为社交媒体被广泛用于分享和寻求健康信息(Chou等人,2018;Suarez-Lledo & Alvarez-Galvez, 2021)。社区参与和搜索灰色文献是了解不同地方错误信息背景的重要方法。例如,为了更好地理解错误信息是如何在玻利维亚土著盖丘亚人对疫苗的犹豫中发挥作用的,我们与一位盖丘亚人的社交媒体影响者合作,他帮助我们创作了一个受当前当地错误信息启发的小品。同样,我们也要求医疗保健领域的其他利益相关者,如当地青少年、一线医生和健康专家,帮助创建针对各自社区的内容。这里使用的知识翻译策略是将信息语境化,吸引潜在的疫苗犹豫群体,并使用社区参与策略,如让影响者参与进来,帮助我们接触特定的人口群体,克服语言和文化障碍(Bella et al., 2021)。定量评估项目影响的一种方法是通过社交媒体分析。当贡献者或有影响力的人帮助创建视听并与他们的追随者分享时,我们的一些内容在目标人口统计中达到了1000次以上的印象和200次观看。这一初步成功可能意味着healthtrueinfo如何模拟卫生专家、社交媒体影响者和他们自己社区成员的想法,通过创建多模式社交媒体内容,共同努力减少疫苗错误信息和犹豫,这反过来可能有助于提高健康和数字素养,并消除社会孤立。由于卫生错误信息是一个相对较新的研究领域,而玻利维亚等国和一般土著社区关于疫苗犹豫的文献有限,因此,“真实健康信息”可以激励在同行评议文献中代表性不足的国家和社区开展参与性行动研究,以更好地了解导致疫苗错误信息和犹豫的不同具体环境因素。[参考文献]周文生,吴安,和克莱因,w.m.p.(2018)。解决社交媒体上与健康相关的错误信息。中国生物医学工程杂志,2016(3),417- 418。https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2018.16865La Bella, E., Allen, C., & Lirussi, F.(2021)。传播与证据:在信息大流行期间,是什么阻碍了科学的传播?叙述性评论中西医结合研究,10(4),100731。https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imr.2021.100731Loomba, S., de Figueiredo, A., Piatek, S. J, de Graaf, K., & Larson, H. J.(2021)。衡量COVID-19疫苗错误信息对英国和美国疫苗接种意图的影响。自然-人类行为,5(3),337-348。https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01056-1Suarez-Lledo, V., & Alvarez-Galvez, J.(2021)。社会媒体上健康错误信息的流行:系统评价。医学互联网研究,23(1),e17187。https://doi.org/10.2196/17187
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Health TrueInfo: A multilingual Android app and social media approach in tackling COVID-19 vaccine misinformation and hesitancy in Bolivia, India, and Canada
COVID-19 vaccine misinformation has been fueling vaccine hesitancy, which has been one of the main factors in slowing down the vaccination rate (Loomba et al., 2021). An increase in vaccine hesitancy, especially among the vulnerable communities, will exacerbate the already overwhelming economic and health burden of COVID-19. The purpose of Health TrueInfo is to use knowledge translation strategies to implement evidence-based health communications via social media in order to tackle COVID-19 vaccine misinformation and hesitancy among vulnerable populations in Bolivia, India, and Canada. The Health TrueInfo initiative is in collaboration with health experts and community members, asking them to create audiovisuals that convey powerful and culturally relevant messages to their communities. Such content combats local misinformation and encourages vaccine uptake. The audiovisual content is then uploaded to our multilingual Android app and social media platforms on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.The concept of using social media to tackle misinformation was informed from systematic reviews, highlighting its potential by health organizations to combat prevalent misinformation as social media is widely used to share and seek health information (Chou et al., 2018; Suarez-Lledo & Alvarez-Galvez, 2021). Community engagement and searching grey literature were important methodologies to understand different local contexts of misinformation. For instance, to better comprehend how misinformation plays a role in increasing vaccine hesitancy among the Indigenous Quechua peoples in Bolivia, we collaborated with a Quechua social media influencer, who helped us create a skit inspired by the current local misinformation. Likewise, we have asked other stakeholders in healthcare like local teenagers, frontline doctors, and health experts to help create content addressing their respective communities. The knowledge translation strategies utilized here were to contextualize information, appeal to potential vaccine-hesitant groups, and use community engagement strategies like involving influencers to help us reach specific demographic groups and overcome linguistic and cultural barriers (Bella et al., 2021). One way to quantitatively estimate the impact of the project is through social media analytics. When contributors or influencers helped create audiovisuals and share with their followers, some of our content have reached over 1000 impressions and 200 views within targeted demographics. This initial success may imply how Health TrueInfo models the idea of health experts, social media influencers, and members of their own communities working together to reduce vaccine misinformation and hesitancy via creating multimodal social media contents, which in turn might help increase health and digital literacy, and battle social isolation. As health misinformation is a relatively new research field and vaccine hesitancy literature for countries like Bolivia and for the Indigenous communities in general are limited, Health TrueInfo can inspire participatory action research in countries and communities that are under-represented in the peer-reviewed literature to better understand different context-specific factors contributing to vaccine misinformation and hesitancy. References Chou, W. S., Oh, A., & Klein, W. M. P. (2018). Addressing Health-Related Misinformation on Social Media. Jama, 320(23), 2417-2418. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2018.16865 La Bella, E., Allen, C., & Lirussi, F. (2021). Communication vs evidence: What hinders the outreach of science during an infodemic? A narrative review. Integrative Medicine Research, 10(4), 100731. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imr.2021.100731 Loomba, S., de Figueiredo, A., Piatek, S. J., de Graaf, K., & Larson, H. J. (2021). Measuring the impact of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation on vaccination intent in the UK and USA. Nature Human Behaviour, 5(3), 337-348. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01056-1 Suarez-Lledo, V., & Alvarez-Galvez, J. (2021). Prevalence of Health Misinformation on Social Media: Systematic Review. J Med Internet Res, 23(1), e17187. https://doi.org/10.2196/17187
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