Measuring the Burden of Infodemics: Summary of the Methods and Results of the Fifth WHO Infodemic Management Conference

Elisabeth Wilhelm(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Isabella Ballalai(Brazilian Society of Speech), Marie‐Ève Bélanger(University of Geneva), Peter Benjamin(Western Cape Department of Health), Catherine Bertrand-Ferrandis(Amyloidosis Foundation), Supriya Bezbaruah(World Health Organization), Sylvie Briand(World Health Organization), Ian Brooks(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Richard Bruns(Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security), Lucie M. Bucci(Canadian Public Health Association), Neville Calleja(Ministry for Health), Howard Chiou(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Abhinav Devaria(George Institute for Global Health), Lorena Dini(Berlin Institute of Health at Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Hyjel D'Souza(George Institute for Global Health), Adam G. Dunn(The University of Sydney), Johannes C. Eichstaedt(Cardiovascular Institute of the South), Silvia Evers(Maastricht University), Nina Gobat(World Health Organization), Mika Gissler(Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare), Ian Christian Gonzales(Department of Health), Anatoliy Gruzd(Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research), Sarah Hess(World Health Organization), Atsuyoshi Ishizumi(World Health Organization), Oommen John(George Institute for Global Health), Ashish Joshi(City University of New York), Benjamin F. Kaluza(Fraunhofer Institute for Technological Trend Analysis), Nagwa Khamis(Ain Shams University), Monika Kosinska(World Health Organization), Shibani Kulkarni(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Dimitra Lingri(Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), Ramona Ludolph(World Health Organization), Tim K. Mackey(University of California System), Stefan Mandić‐Rajčević(University of Belgrade), Filippo Menczer(Indiana University Bloomington), Vijaybabu Mudaliar(George Institute for Global Health), Shruti Murthy(George Institute for Global Health), Syed Nazakat(South Asian University), Tim Nguyen(World Health Organization), Jennifer Nilsen(Harvard University), Elena Pallari(St Thomas' Hospital), Natália Pasternak Taschner(Federal Institute of São Paulo), Elena Petelos(University of Crete), Mitchell J. Prinstein(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jon Roozenbeek(University of Cambridge), Anton Schneider(United States Agency for International Development), Varadharajan Srinivasan(George Institute for Global Health), Aleksandar Stevanović(University of Belgrade), Brigitte Strahwald(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Shabbir Syed-Abdul(George Institute for Global Health), Sandra Varaidzo Machiri(African Field Epidemiology Network), Sander van der Linden(University of Cambridge), Christopher Voegeli(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Claire Wardle(Brown University), Odette Wegwarth(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Becky K White(World Health Organization), Estelle Willie(Rockefeller Foundation), Brian Yau(World Health Organization), Tina D Purnat(World Health Organization)
JMIR Infodemiology
January 26, 2023
Cited by 49Open Access
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Abstract

Background: An infodemic is excess information, including false or misleading information, that spreads in digital and physical environments during a public health emergency. The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by an unprecedented global infodemic that has led to confusion about the benefits of medical and public health interventions, with substantial impact on risk-taking and health-seeking behaviors, eroding trust in health authorities and compromising the effectiveness of public health responses and policies. Standardized measures are needed to quantify the harmful impacts of the infodemic in a systematic and methodologically robust manner, as well as harmonizing highly divergent approaches currently explored for this purpose. This can serve as a foundation for a systematic, evidence-based approach to monitoring, identifying, and mitigating future infodemic harms in emergency preparedness and prevention. Objective: In this paper, we summarize the Fifth World Health Organization (WHO) Infodemic Management Conference structure, proceedings, outcomes, and proposed actions seeking to identify the interdisciplinary approaches and frameworks needed to enable the measurement of the burden of infodemics. Methods: An iterative human-centered design (HCD) approach and concept mapping were used to facilitate focused discussions and allow for the generation of actionable outcomes and recommendations. The discussions included 86 participants representing diverse scientific disciplines and health authorities from 28 countries across all WHO regions, along with observers from civil society and global public health-implementing partners. A thematic map capturing the concepts matching the key contributing factors to the public health burden of infodemics was used throughout the conference to frame and contextualize discussions. Five key areas for immediate action were identified. Results: The 5 key areas for the development of metrics to assess the burden of infodemics and associated interventions included (1) developing standardized definitions and ensuring the adoption thereof; (2) improving the map of concepts influencing the burden of infodemics; (3) conducting a review of evidence, tools, and data sources; (4) setting up a technical working group; and (5) addressing immediate priorities for postpandemic recovery and resilience building. The summary report consolidated group input toward a common vocabulary with standardized terms, concepts, study designs, measures, and tools to estimate the burden of infodemics and the effectiveness of infodemic management interventions. Conclusions: Standardizing measurement is the basis for documenting the burden of infodemics on health systems and population health during emergencies. Investment is needed into the development of practical, affordable, evidence-based, and systematic methods that are legally and ethically balanced for monitoring infodemics; generating diagnostics, infodemic insights, and recommendations; and developing interventions, action-oriented guidance, policies, support options, mechanisms, and tools for infodemic managers and emergency program managers.


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