A scoping review of digital health interventions for combating COVID-19 misinformation and disinformation

Author:

Czerniak Katarzyna1,Pillai Raji2,Parmar Abhi3,Ramnath Kavita3,Krocker Joseph4,Myneni Sahiti3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston , Houston, Texas, USA

2. Cizik School of Nursing, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston , Houston, Texas, USA

3. School of Biomedical Informatics, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston , Houston, Texas, USA

4. Department of Surgery, McGovern Medical School, Center for Translational Injury Research, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston , Houston, Texas, USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWe provide a scoping review of Digital Health Interventions (DHIs) that mitigate COVID-19 misinformation and disinformation seeding and spread.Materials and MethodsWe applied our search protocol to PubMed, PsychINFO, and Web of Science to screen 1666 articles. The 17 articles included in this paper are experimental and interventional studies that developed and tested public consumer-facing DHIs. We examined these DHIs to understand digital features, incorporation of theory, the role of healthcare professionals, end-user experience, and implementation issues.ResultsThe majority of studies (n = 11) used social media in DHIs, but there was a lack of platform-agnostic generalizability. Only half of the studies (n = 9) specified a theory, framework, or model to guide DHIs. Nine studies involve healthcare professionals as design or implementation contributors. Only one DHI was evaluated for user perceptions and acceptance.DiscussionThe translation of advances in online social computing to interventions is sparse. The limited application of behavioral theory and cognitive models of reasoning has resulted in suboptimal targeting of psychosocial variables and individual factors that may drive resistance to misinformation. This affects large-scale implementation and community outreach efforts. DHIs optimized through community-engaged participatory methods that enable understanding of unique needs of vulnerable communities are urgently needed.ConclusionsWe recommend community engagement and theory-guided engineering of equitable DHIs. It is important to consider the problem of misinformation and disinformation through a multilevel lens that illuminates personal, clinical, cultural, and social pathways to mitigate the negative consequences of misinformation and disinformation on human health and wellness.

Funder

National Library of Medicine

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

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