| Literature DB >> 32783794 |
Md Saiful Islam1,2, Tonmoy Sarkar1, Sazzad Hossain Khan1, Abu-Hena Mostofa Kamal3, S M Murshid Hasan4, Alamgir Kabir2,5, Dalia Yeasmin1, Mohammad Ariful Islam1, Kamal Ibne Amin Chowdhury1, Kazi Selim Anwar6, Abrar Ahmad Chughtai2, Holly Seale2.
Abstract
Infodemics, often including rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories, have been common during the COVID-19 pandemic. Monitoring social media data has been identified as the best method for tracking rumors in real time and as a possible way to dispel misinformation and reduce stigma. However, the detection, assessment, and response to rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories in real time are a challenge. Therefore, we followed and examined COVID-19-related rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories circulating on online platforms, including fact-checking agency websites, Facebook, Twitter, and online newspapers, and their impacts on public health. Information was extracted between December 31, 2019 and April 5, 2020, and descriptively analyzed. We performed a content analysis of the news articles to compare and contrast data collected from other sources. We identified 2,311 reports of rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories in 25 languages from 87 countries. Claims were related to illness, transmission and mortality (24%), control measures (21%), treatment and cure (19%), cause of disease including the origin (15%), violence (1%), and miscellaneous (20%). Of the 2,276 reports for which text ratings were available, 1,856 claims were false (82%). Misinformation fueled by rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories can have potentially serious implications on the individual and community if prioritized over evidence-based guidelines. Health agencies must track misinformation associated with the COVID-19 in real time, and engage local communities and government stakeholders to debunk misinformation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32783794 PMCID: PMC7543839 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.20-0812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 3.707
Operational definitions used in the study
| Categories | Operational definitions |
|---|---|
| Rumor | Rumor was defined as any unverified and instrumentally relevant claims, statements, and discussion centering COVID-19 circulated in online platforms. |
| Stigma and discrimination | We defined stigma as a socially constructed phenomenon through which a person is directly or indirectly labeled by their illness, exposures, travel history, and ethic descents that further led to negative actions and discrimination. |
| Conspiracy theory | Statements, claims, and discussion of various theories related to the origin of SARS-CoV-2 and its malicious goals. |
| These aforementioned types of infodemic were further classified in the following categories. | |
| Cause of the disease | How did the SARS-CoV-2 emerge and what is the reason? |
| Illness | Statements, claims, and discussion around signs and symptoms of COVID-19, its transmission dynamics, and mortality. |
| Treatment | Statements, claims, and discussion about diagnostic tests, home remedies, and traditional medicines as a cure of COVID-19. |
| Interventions | Steps taken by the health authorities, governments, or other allied institutions to prevent transmission of COVID-19. |
| Violence | Physical or verbal assaults toward any person in community or in the workplace. |
| Miscellaneous | Statements, claims, and discussion that did not fit into said categories. |
Figure 1.Distribution of rumor, stigma, and conspiracy theories related to COVID-19 identified during the study, 2020.
Figure 2.Rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories associated with COVID-19 and time line of reports detected during the study, 2020.
Figure 3.Factual accuracy of rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories linked to COVID-19 causes of disease, illness, treatment, and control measures.
Figure 4.Rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories related to COVID-19 by countries detected during the study, 2020.
Rumor, stigma, and conspiracy theories related to COVID-19 in the globe, 2020
| Rumor |
| “Novel coronavirus is in the cloud” |
| “Coronavirus is a snake flu” |
| “Pet animals are the sources of coronavirus” |
| “Novel coronavirus strain is a type of rabies” |
| “Coronavirus outbreak in the livestock” |
| “Poultry eggs are contaminated with coronavirus” |
| “Cookies, rice, and Chinese red bull were contaminated with the virus” |
| “Eating bat soup is the source of the (COVID-19) outbreak” |
| “COVID-19 found in orange” |
| “Coronavirus from imported goods” |
| “Mobile phone can transmit coronavirus” |
| “Notes are sources of coronavirus” |
| “Common cold had been renamed as coronavirus” |
| Rumor about treatment, prevention, and control |
| “Eating garlic can cure coronavirus” |
| “Drinking bleach may kill the virus” |
| “Drinking alcohol may kill the virus” |
| “Gargling vinegar and rose water or vinegar and salt may kill the virus in throat” |
| “Drinking cow urine and cow dung can cure coronavirus” |
| “Silver solution for coronavirus treatment” |
| “Wearing warm socks, mustard patches, and spreading goose fat on one’s chest as treatment” |
| “Keeping throat moist, avoid spicy food and taking vitamin C may prevent the disease” |
| “Avoiding cold or preserved food and drinks, such as ice cream and milkshakes may prevent infection” |
| “Spraying chlorine all over your body can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Sesame oil can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Granite bath can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Sea lettuce can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Vitamin C intake can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Vitamin D can prevent coronavirus infection” |
| “Eating |
| “Drinks containing mint or white willow, and spices like saffron, turmeric, and cinnamon would strengthen the lungs and the immune system against the virus” |
| “Rinse mouths with salt water solution to prevent infection from the new virus outbreak” |
| “Do not hold your thirst because once your membrane in your throat is dried, the virus will invade into your body within 10 minutes” |
| “Applying petroleum jelly around your nostrils will protect against dangerous air pollutants” |
| “Do-it-yourself coronavirus detection test” |
| “Cannabis boosts immunity against the novel coronavirus” |
| “Frequent washing clothes can reduce transmission” |
| Conspiracy theory |
| “Novel coronavirus is engineered, laboratory-generated virus either accidentally or deliberately released in the area of the Wuhan seafood and animal market” |
| “COVID-2019 outbreak was planned” |
| “It’s a bio-weapon funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation to further vaccine sales” |
| “Biological weapon manufactured by CIA” |
| “President Donald Trump targeted the city with coronavirus to damage its culture and honor in Iran” |
| “The virus is an attempt to wage ‘economic war on China’” |
| “America’s Jews are driving America’s wars” |
| “This outbreak is a medical terrorism” |
| “Zionists are against regional security” |
| United States and Israel of being behind the creation and spread of the deadly coronavirus as part of an economic and psychological war against China |
| “This outbreak is a population control scheme” |
| “Tom Cotton claimed that COVID-19 was manufactured in Chinese bio-laboratory” |
| “Rush Limbaugh opining that whole COVID-19 is a conspiracy against Trump to let him down in election. He purported it as a worse flu” |
| “New coronavirus vaccines already exist” |
| “Pneumonia vaccines are effective against the Wuhan coronavirus” |
| “Israel has sent a vaccine to Wuhan city for patients infected with coronavirus” |
| Stigma |
| “I am not a virus: French Asians angered by racism” |
| “Chinese are uncivilized” |
| “Chinese are bioterrorists” |
| “A French newspaper with headline ‘Yellow Alert’ tagged a Asian woman image wearing mask” |
| “Chinese are dropping their coronavirus” |
| “Every disease has ever came from China” |
| “Keep your virus, dirty Chinese” |
| “Chinese dietary habit caused COVID-19” |