Author:
Sopory Pradeep,Novak Julie M.,Day Ashleigh M.,Eckert Stine,Wilkins Lee,Padgett Donyale R.,Noyes Jane P.,Allen Tomas,Alexander Nyka,Vanderford Marsha L.,Gamhewage Gaya M.
Abstract
Abstract
The systematic review examined the phenomenon of trust during public health emergency events. The literature reviewed was field studies done with people directly affected or likely to be affected by such events and included quantitative, qualitative, mixed-method, and case study primary studies in English (N = 38) as well as Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, and Spanish (all non-English N = 30). Studies were mostly from high- and middle-income countries, and the event most covered was infectious disease. Findings from individual studies were first synthesized within methods and evaluated for certainty/confidence, and then synthesized across methods. The final set of 11 findings synthesized across methods identified a set of activities for enhancing trust and showed that it is a multi-faceted and dynamic concept.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Cited by
7 articles.
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