Abstract

Introduction: Rural residents have been shown to have limited access to reliable health information and therefore may be at higher risks for the adverse health effects of the COVID-19. The aim of this research is 2-fold: (1) to explore the impacts of demographic factors on the accessibility of health information; and (2) to assess the impacts of information channels on the reliability of health information accessed by rural residents in China during the COVID-19 outbreak.Methods: Mixed methods research was performed to provide a relatively complete picture about the accessibility and reliability of health information in rural China in the face of the COVID-19. A quantitative research was conducted through surveying 435 Chinese rural residents and a qualitative study was performed through collecting materials from one of the most popular social media application (WeChat) in China. The logistic regression techniques were used to examine the impacts of demographic factors on the accessibility of health information. The Content analysis was performed to describe and summarize qualitative materials to inform the impacts of information channels on the reliability of health information.Results: Age was found to positively associate with the accessibility of health information, while an opposite association was found between education and the accessibility of health information. Rural residents with monthly income between 3,001 CNY and 4,000 CNY were the least likely to access health information. Rural residents who worked/studied from home were more likely to access health information. Meanwhile, health information tended to be derived from non-official social media channels where rumors and unverified health information spread fast, and the elderly and less-educated rural residents were more likely to access health misinformation.Conclusions: Policy makers are suggested to adopt efficient measures to contain the spread of rumors and unverified health information on non-official social media platforms during the outbreak of a pandemic. More efforts should be devoted to assist the elderly and less-educated rural residents to access reliable health information in the face of a pandemic outbreak.

Highlights

  • Rural residents have been shown to have limited access to reliable health information and may be at higher risks for the adverse health effects of the COVID-19

  • Diachronic Description At the very beginning of the outbreak of the COVID-19, only the young and well-educated were engaging in discussing, forwarding, and posting health information about the COVID-19 in the WeChat chat rooms and “moments.” It was until the Wuhan health department declared the number of confirmed cases of the COVID-19 on January 3, 2020 and the health professionals emphasized the severity of the coronavirus, health information about the COVID-19 went viral in the WeChat chat rooms and “moments.”

  • Three forms of notes were recorded by researchers: first, channels through which rural residents accessed health information related to the COVID-19; second, reliability of health information accessed by these rural residents; and third, age and education of these rural residents who discussed, forwarded, and posted health information about the COVID-19

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Summary

Introduction

Rural residents have been shown to have limited access to reliable health information and may be at higher risks for the adverse health effects of the COVID-19. Quality information is essential to keep the rural residents calm and informed on the correct steps to take [4]. Media such as television and newspapers, which carry information from authorized sources, played a central role in transmitting reliable health information [5]. Health misinformation about the COVID-19 is a serious threat to global public health and can lead to life-threatening consequences [7]; it is of paramount significance to investigate whether rural residents can access reliable health information during the outbreak of the COVID-19

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