Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Infodemiology

Date Submitted: Jun 25, 2021
Date Accepted: Aug 23, 2021

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

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

Calleja N, Abad N, AbdAllah A, Ahmed N, Albarracin D, Altieri E, Anoko JN, Arcos R, Azlan AA, Bayer J, Bechmann A, Bezbaruah S, Briand SC, Brooks I, Bucci LM, Burzo S, Czerniak C, De Domenico M, Dunn AG, Ecker UKH, Espinosa L, Francois C, Gradon K, Gruzd A, Gülgün BS, Haydarov R, Hurley C, Astuti SI, Ishizumi A, Johnson N, Johnson Restrepo D, Kajimoto M, Koyuncu A, Kulkarni S, Lamichhane J, Lewis R, Mahajan A, Mandil A, Mcaweeney E, Messer M, Moy W, Ndumbi Ngamala P, Nguyen T, Nunn M, Omer SB, Pagliari C, Patel P, Phuong L, Prybylski D, Rashidian A, Rempel E, Rubinelli S, Sacco P, Schneider A, Shu K, Smith M, Sufehmi H, Tangcharoensathien V, Terry R, Thacker N, Trewinnard T, Turner S, Tworek H, Uakkas S, Vraga E, Wardle C, Wasserman H, Wilhelm E, Würz A, Yau B, Zhou L, Purnat TD

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

JMIR Infodemiology 2021;1(1):e30979

DOI: 10.2196/30979

PMID: 34604708

PMCID: 8448461

A public health research agenda for managing infodemics: Methods and results of the first WHO infodemiology conference

  • Neville Calleja; 
  • Neetu Abad; 
  • AbdelHalim AbdAllah; 
  • 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

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. The global scale and high stakes of the emergency have made responding to the infodemic related to the COVID-19 pandemic 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:

WHO organised the first global infodemiology conference, entirely online during June-July 2020, and a follow up August-October 2020, to review current multidisciplinary evidence, interventions and practices that can be applied to the COVID-19 infodemic response. This resulted in a public health research agenda for managing infodemics.

Methods:

As part of the conference, a structured expert judgement synthesis method was used to formulate a public health research agenda. One hundred and ten 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 follow-up managed process to assemble a research agenda based on the discussion and structured expert feedback. This resulted in a five-work-stream 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 summarised in a public health research agenda which included a list of priority research questions.

Results:

The public health research agenda for infodemic management has five work-streams: (i) measuring and continuously monitoring the impact of infodemics during health emergencies; (ii) detecting signals and understanding the spread and risk of infodemics; (iii) responding aThe public health research agenda for infodemic management has five work-streams: (i) measuring and continuously monitoring the impact of infodemics during health emergencies; (ii) detecting signals and understanding the spread and risk of infodemics; (iii) responding and deploying interventions that mitigate and protect against infodemics and their harmful effects; (iv) evaluating infodemic interventions and strengthening the resilience of individuals and communities to infodemics; and (v) promoting the development, adaptation and application of interventions and toolkits for infodemic management. Each work-stream identified research questions and highlights 49 high priority research questions.nd deploying interventions that mitigate and protect against infodemics and their harmful effects; (iv) evaluating infodemic interventions and strengthening the resilience of individuals and communities to infodemics; and (v) promoting the development, adaptation and application of interventions and toolkits for infodemic management. Each work-stream identified 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. For that to be possible, infodemiology provides a scientific foundation. This research agenda proposes a structured framework for targeted investment for the scientific community, policymakers, implementing organizations and other stakeholders to consider.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Calleja N, Abad N, AbdAllah A, Ahmed N, Albarracin D, Altieri E, Anoko JN, Arcos R, Azlan AA, Bayer J, Bechmann A, Bezbaruah S, Briand SC, Brooks I, Bucci LM, Burzo S, Czerniak C, De Domenico M, Dunn AG, Ecker UKH, Espinosa L, Francois C, Gradon K, Gruzd A, Gülgün BS, Haydarov R, Hurley C, Astuti SI, Ishizumi A, Johnson N, Johnson Restrepo D, Kajimoto M, Koyuncu A, Kulkarni S, Lamichhane J, Lewis R, Mahajan A, Mandil A, Mcaweeney E, Messer M, Moy W, Ndumbi Ngamala P, Nguyen T, Nunn M, Omer SB, Pagliari C, Patel P, Phuong L, Prybylski D, Rashidian A, Rempel E, Rubinelli S, Sacco P, Schneider A, Shu K, Smith M, Sufehmi H, Tangcharoensathien V, Terry R, Thacker N, Trewinnard T, Turner S, Tworek H, Uakkas S, Vraga E, Wardle C, Wasserman H, Wilhelm E, Würz A, Yau B, Zhou L, Purnat TD

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

JMIR Infodemiology 2021;1(1):e30979

DOI: 10.2196/30979

PMID: 34604708

PMCID: 8448461

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.