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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Jun 4, 2020
Date Accepted: Sep 9, 2020
Date Submitted to PubMed: Oct 8, 2020

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Trends and Predictors of COVID-19 Information Sources and Their Relationship With Knowledge and Beliefs Related to the Pandemic: Nationwide Cross-Sectional Study

Ali SH, Foreman J, Tozan Y, Capasso A, Jones AM, DiClemente RJ

Trends and Predictors of COVID-19 Information Sources and Their Relationship With Knowledge and Beliefs Related to the Pandemic: Nationwide Cross-Sectional Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2020;6(4):e21071

DOI: 10.2196/21071

PMID: 32936775

PMCID: 7546863

Trends and predictors of COVID-19 information sources and their relationship with knowledge and beliefs related to the pandemic: a nationwide cross-sectional study

  • Shahmir H. Ali; 
  • Joshua Foreman; 
  • Yesim Tozan; 
  • Ariadna Capasso; 
  • Abbey M. Jones; 
  • Ralph J. DiClemente

ABSTRACT

Background:

COVID-19 has emerged as a rapidly evolving global health crisis, leading to a heightened need to understand health information seeking behaviors in order to address disparities in knowledge and beliefs about the crisis.

Objective:

This study assessed socio-demographic predictors of the use and trust of different COVID-19 information sources, and the association between information sources, knowledge and beliefs about the pandemic.

Methods:

An online survey was conducted among U.S. adults in two rounds within March-April 2020 using social-media advertisement-based recruitment. Participants were asked on their use of eleven different COVID-19 information sources, followed by a single question which assessed participants’ most trusted information source. Selection of COVID-related knowledge and belief questions was identified using past empirical literature and salient concerns at the time of survey implementation.

Results:

The sample consists of 11,242 participants. Government websites were used less by 40-59-year-olds (AOR 0.59, 95%CI:0.46-0.74) and those ≥60-years (AOR 0.49, 95%CI:0.37-0.64) compared to 18-38-years-olds. Participants in April were markedly less likely to use (AORuse 0.41, 95%CI:0.35-0.46) and trust government sources (AORtrust 0.51, 95%CI:0.47-0.56). The information source on COVID-19 knowledge was mixed, while many COVID-19 beliefs were significantly predicted by information source.

Conclusions:

Study findings can help inform COVID-19 health communication campaigns and highlight the impact of using a variety of different and trusted information sources.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Ali SH, Foreman J, Tozan Y, Capasso A, Jones AM, DiClemente RJ

Trends and Predictors of COVID-19 Information Sources and Their Relationship With Knowledge and Beliefs Related to the Pandemic: Nationwide Cross-Sectional Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2020;6(4):e21071

DOI: 10.2196/21071

PMID: 32936775

PMCID: 7546863

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