COVID-19 information disorder: six types of harmful information during the pandemic in Europe

The outbreak of a novel coronavirus disease COVID-19 propelled the creation, transmission, and consumption of false information - unverified claims, misleading statements, false rumours, conspiracy theories, and so on - all around the world. When various official or unofficial sources issue erroneou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of risk research 2021-04, Vol.24 (3-4), p.380-393
Hauptverfasser: Hansson, Sten, Orru, Kati, Torpan, Sten, Bäck, Asta, Kazemekaityte, Austeja, Meyer, Sunniva Frislid, Ludvigsen, Johanna, Savadori, Lucia, Galvagni, Alessandro, Pigrée, Ala
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container_end_page 393
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 380
container_title Journal of risk research
container_volume 24
creator Hansson, Sten
Orru, Kati
Torpan, Sten
Bäck, Asta
Kazemekaityte, Austeja
Meyer, Sunniva Frislid
Ludvigsen, Johanna
Savadori, Lucia
Galvagni, Alessandro
Pigrée, Ala
description The outbreak of a novel coronavirus disease COVID-19 propelled the creation, transmission, and consumption of false information - unverified claims, misleading statements, false rumours, conspiracy theories, and so on - all around the world. When various official or unofficial sources issue erroneous, misleading or contradicting information during a crisis, people who are exposed to this may behave in ways that cause harm to the health and well-being of themselves or others, e.g., by not taking appropriate risk reducing measures or blaming or harassing vulnerable groups. To work towards a typology of informational content that may increase people's vulnerability in the context of the coronavirus pandemic, we explored 98 instances of potentially harmful information that spread in six European countries - France, Italy, Norway, Finland, Lithuania, and Estonia - between March and May 2020. We suggest that during the pandemic, exposure to harmful information may have made people more vulnerable in six ways: (1) by discouraging appropriate protective actions against catching/spreading the virus, (2) by promoting the use of false (or harmful) remedies against the virus, (3) by misrepresenting the transmission mechanisms of the virus, (4) by downplaying the risks related to the pandemic, (5) by tricking people into buying fake protection against the virus or into revealing their confidential information, and (6) by victimising the alleged spreaders of the virus by harassment/hate speech. The proposed typology can be used to guide the development of risk communication plans to address each of these information-related vulnerabilities.
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source Business Source Complete; Taylor & Francis
subjects Communication planning
Confidentiality
Conspiracy
coronavirus
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Disease transmission
disinformation
Harassment
Hate speech
infodemic
misinformation
Pandemics
Risk communication
Vulnerability
title COVID-19 information disorder: six types of harmful information during the pandemic in Europe
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