COVID-19危机期间健康信息行为的代际差异:香港研究

IF 3.2 2区 文学 Q1 COMMUNICATION Global Media and China Pub Date : 2024-03-13 DOI:10.1177/20594364241238635
Leanne Chang, Timothy K. F. Fung, Ho-Man Leung, Po-yan. Lai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

文献探讨了在 COVID-19 大流行期间寻求健康信息的年龄差异。然而,关于健康信息扫描和共享的基本因素的代际差异,以及健康信息寻求、扫描和共享的相互作用的代际差异的研究还存在明显的空白。本研究考察了:(1) 三个世代群体在网上健康信息搜索、网上健康信息扫描和 COVID-19 信息共享中与风险和渠道相关的动机差异:婴儿潮一代、X 代和千禧一代;以及 (2) 信息寻求、扫描和共享之间的代际差异。在比较各年龄组的信息行为时,对代际差异的关注既考虑了生理差异,也考虑了社会差异。数据来自一项针对 1004 名香港居民的在线调查。调查结果显示,各代人在信息扫描的频率高于信息搜寻的频率,以及信息搜寻与信息分享之间的正相关关系方面具有相似性。代际差异体现在几个方面,包括寻求信息和扫描信息的频率;健康状况与寻求信息之间的关系;收入、健康状况、渠道特征和渠道效用与信息扫描之间的关系;以及寻求信息和扫描信息与信息分享之间的关系。在香港 COVID-19 的历史和文化背景下,这些研究结果为我们提供了一些见解,帮助我们了解与风险和渠道相关的因素在影响个人的信息行为时是如何在不同代际之间产生差异或超越代际差异的。我们的研究结果为未来公共卫生危机中不同代际群体的传播策略提供了参考。
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Generational differences in health information behaviors during the COVID-19 crisis: A Hong Kong study
The literature has explored age differences in health information seeking during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, there is a noticeable gap in research regarding generational variations in the underlying factors of health information scanning and sharing, as well as generational differences in the interplay of health information seeking, scanning, and sharing. This study examined: (1) differences in risk- and channel-related motivators of online health information seeking, online health information scanning, and COVID-19 information sharing among three generational cohorts: Baby Boomers, Generation X, and Millennials; and (2) generational differences in the relationship between information seeking, scanning, and sharing. The focus on generational differences took into consideration both biological and social differences in age cohorts when comparing their information behaviors. The data came from an online survey of 1,004 Hong Kong residents. Results showed generational similarities in individuals’ more frequent information scanning than seeking and the positive relationship between information seeking and sharing. Generational differences emerged in several aspects, including the frequency of information seeking and scanning; the relationship between health status and information seeking; associations of income, health status, channel characteristics, and channel utility with information scanning; and associations of information seeking and scanning with information sharing. These findings offer insights into how risk- and channel-related factors may differ among generations or transcend generational differences in shaping individuals’ information behaviors in the historical and cultural context of COVID-19 in Hong Kong. Results of our study inform communication strategies for different generational groups in future public health crises.
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来源期刊
Global Media and China
Global Media and China COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
29
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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