Trust in COVID-19 public health information. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Understanding the factors that influence trust in public health information is critical for designing successful public health campaigns during pandemics such as COVID-19. We present findings from a cross-sectional survey of 454 US adults-243 older (65+) and 211 younger (18-64) adults-who responded to questionnaires on human values, trust in COVID-19 information sources, attention to information quality, self-efficacy, and factual knowledge about COVID-19. Path analysis showed that trust in direct personal contacts (B=0.071, p=.04) and attention to information quality (B=0.251, p<.001) were positively related to self-efficacy for coping with COVID-19. The human value of self-transcendence, which emphasizes valuing others as equals and being concerned with their welfare, had significant positive indirect effects on self-efficacy in coping with COVID-19 (mediated by attention to information quality; effect=0.049, 95% CI 0.001-0.104) and factual knowledge about COVID-19 (also mediated by attention to information quality; effect=0.037, 95% CI 0.003-0.089). Our path model offers guidance for fine-tuning strategies for effective public health messaging and serves as a basis for further research to better understand the societal impact of COVID-19 and other public health crises.

published proceedings

  • J Assoc Inf Sci Technol

author list (cited authors)

  • Verma, N., Fleischmann, K. R., Zhou, L. e., Xie, B. o., Lee, M. K., Rich, K., ... Zimmerman, T.

citation count

  • 5

complete list of authors

  • Verma, Nitin||Fleischmann, Kenneth R||Zhou, Le||Xie, Bo||Lee, Min Kyung||Rich, Kate||Shiroma, Kristina||Jia, Chenyan||Zimmerman, Tara

publication date

  • September 2022

publisher