| Literature DB >> 32974266 |
Trevor Thomas1, Annabelle Wilson1, Emma Tonkin1, Emma R Miller1, Paul R Ward1.
Abstract
Global pandemics are likely to increase in frequency and severity, and media communication of key messages represents an important mediator of the behavior of individuals in response to public health countermeasures. Where the media places responsibility during a pandemic is therefore important to study as blame is commonly used as a tool to influence public behavior but can also lead to the subjective persecution of groups. The aim of this paper is to investigate where the media places responsibility for COVID-19 in Australia. Specifically, we identify the key themes and frames that are present and observe how they changed over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to government actions and progression of the pandemic. Understanding media representations of the COVID-19 pandemic will provide insights into ways in which responsibility is framed in relation to health action. Newspaper articles from the Australian and the Sydney Morning Herald were sampled between January 20 and March 31 2020 on every second Monday. Factiva was used to identify and download newspaper articles using the following search criteria: "COVID-19" OR coronavirus OR "Wuhan virus" OR "corona virus" OR "Hebei virus" OR "wet market" OR (Wuhan AND virus) OR (market AND Wuhan and virus) or (China AND Virus) or (Novel AND Virus). Articles were imported into Nvivo and thematic and framing analyses were used. The results show that framing of the pandemic was largely based on societal issues with the theme of economic disruption prevalent throughout the study time period. Moral evaluations of the pandemic were infrequent initially but increased co-incident with the first signs of "flattening of the curve." Explicit examples of blame were very rare but were commonly implied based on the causal origin of the virus. The Australian printed media were slow to report on the COVID-19 pandemic, in addition they were reluctant to apportion blame until the end of the study period, after confirmed case rates had begun to slow. This is interpreted as being due to an evaluation of the pandemic risks as low by the media and therefore the tools of othering and blame were not used until after the study period when the actual risks had begun to abate, more consistent with an inquiry than a mediating mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; blame; framing analysis; media analysis; responsibility; thematic analysis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32974266 PMCID: PMC7472525 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Search method summary.
| Search 1 | The Australian, The Advertiser, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Australian Financial Review | 1 October 2019 to 31 March 2020 (past 6 months) | |
| Search 2 | The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald | 1 October 2019 to 31 March 2020 (past 6 months) | |
| Search 3 | The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald | 20 January to 31 March 2020 | |
| Final Dataset | The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald | 20 January 2020 to 31 March 2020 |
Search terms used to acquire article database.
| Search terms | “COVID-19” OR coronavirus OR “Wuhan virus” OR “corona virus” OR “Hebei Virus” OR “wet market” OR (Wuhan AND virus) OR (market AND Wuhan AND virus) or (China AND virus) or (novel AND virus) |
| Search region | Limited to “Australia” |
Figure 1Publication and COVID-19 frequency per day for the study time period.
Study time period divisions.
| 1—Beginning | 20/01/20 to 03/02/20 (Weeks 1 and 3) | 24 |
| 2—Middle | 17/02/20 to 02/03/20 (Weeks 5 and 7) | 55 |
| 3—End | 16/03/20 to 30/03/20 (Weeks 9 and 11) | 234 |
| Total | 313 |
Week 1 and 3, framing of COVID-19 (n = 24).
| Medical | Virus outbreak | Increasing cases | Flatten the curve | |
| Behavioral | Hypocritical actions | Individuals separated from family | Calm down | |
| Societal | Spread of coronavirus | Financial | Economic impacts border closures supply lines disrupted Global financial market Unknown timing of impacts | Cancel flights |
Shading of cells represent relative frequency of themes (white = uncommon, light gray = few instances, dark gray = common, black = very frequent occurrence).
Week 5 and 7, framing of COVID-19 (n = 55).
| Medical | Cruise ship confines | Authorities and researchers' mistrust of foreign countries epidemiological data | Increasing cases | Infection and recovery = resistance |
| Behavioral | Individuals unsanitary actions | Individuals putting the community at risk | Individuals not taking pandemic seriously | Self-prescribed self-isolation |
| Societal | Spread of coronavirus | Gov. making good decisions | Economic | Cancel flights |
Shading of cells represent relative frequency of themes (white = uncommon, light gray = few instances, dark gray = common, black = very frequent occurrence).
Week 9 and 11, framing of COVID-19 (n = 234).
| Medical | High infection rates (R0) | Triage—who gets a ventilator Elderly side-lined | No vaccine developed, in testing | Social isolation |
| Behavioral | Sharing kitchen utensils asymptomatic individuals not self-isolating | Disgraceful behavior in shops | Close contact risks ignored | Legal enforcement |
| Societal | Spread of coronavirus | Slow response | Economic | Wage freeze, pay cuts, job losses |
Shading of cells represent relative frequency of themes (white = uncommon, light gray = few instances, dark gray = common, black = very frequent occurrence).