| Literature DB >> 35525924 |
Sara Rubinelli1, Tina D Purnat2, Elisabeth Wilhelm3, Denise Traicoff4, Apophia Namageyo-Funa4, Angus Thomson5, Claire Wardle6, Jaya Lamichhane7, Sylvie Briand8, Tim Nguyen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In April 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) Information Network for Epidemics produced an agenda for managing the COVID-19 infodemic. "Infodemic" refers to the overabundance of information-including mis- and disinformation. In this agenda it was pointed out the need to create a competency framework for infodemic management (IM). This framework was released by WHO on 20th September 2021. This paper presents the WHO framework for IM by highlighting the different investigative steps behind its development.Entities:
Keywords: Competencies; Infodemic; Workforce
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35525924 PMCID: PMC9077350 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-022-00733-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Fig. 1Components of the competency framework
Fig. 2The five workstreams in the epi curve of an infodemic response analogous to the epidemic response
Domains of the IM competency framework and related activities
| Domain (1) | 1. Infodemic management |
| Infodemic managers apply IM and the science of infodemiology to public health policies, programs and practice | |
| Activity | 1.1 Coordinate, facilitate and strengthen |
| Promote and facilitate implementation of IM within institutions | |
| Domain (2) | 2. Prepare and monitor |
| Infodemic managers use effective tools to listen to target audiences and have the skills to design and share appropriate information | |
| Activity | 2.1 Listen |
| Listen, identify and understand population gaps, needs, behaviors and their determinants to develop more responsive health programs | |
| Activity | 2.2 Inform |
| Proactively share accurate, credible and appropriate information to target audiences to increase awareness, to build and strengthen health literacy, and to promote healthy behaviors on health issues | |
| Domain (3) | 3. Detect and intervene |
| Infodemic managers design, implement and evaluate interventions to promote resilience to misinformation and empower individuals and communities in exercising their right to access quality health information | |
| Activity | 3.1 Intervene |
| Empower individuals and communities to mitigate harm of mis/disinformation | |
| Activity | 3.2 Counter |
| Offer corrections in a timely way that match how the mis/disinformation is spread | |
| Activity | 3.3 Monitor |
| Measure the impact of interventions and countering/correction strategies | |
| Activity | 3.4 Support |
| Support individuals’ and communities’ resilience against mis/disinformation | |
| Domain (4) | 4. Strengthen |
| Infodemic managers strengthen health systems to ensure healthier populations through a better IM in health emergencies and in regular contexts | |
| Activity | 4.1 Prepare |
| Ensure that data-based insights and lessons learned from interventions are applied to prepare health systems with planning, processes and policies for IM | |
| Activity | 4.2 Ongoing monitoring and strategy refinement |
| Implement regular and nimble feedback and a refinement process to adapt to the changing needs of the target populations | |
| Activity | 4.3 Building capacity |
| Build IM capacity within institutions |
IM tasks according to the related activities
| Domain (1) | 1. Infodemic management |
| Activity | 1.1 Coordinate, facilitate and strengthen |
| Main tasks: | • Develop or adopt a taxonomy of classifications for mis/disinformation as a reference framework for IM • Promote and ensure coordination among the different domains and tasks of IM • Develop partnerships with organizations that are active in IM • Promote ethical conduct in IM to avoid the spread and propagation of harmful health information, as well as unintended harm from all actions |
| Domain (2) | 2. Prepare and monitor |
| Activity | 2.1 Listen |
| Main tasks: | • Analyze and evaluate individuals’ behaviors, focusing on personal, social and environmental determinants • Identify people’s topics of interest • Detect information deficits and open questions in the offline and online populations • Identify, analyze and evaluate the evidence-basis of the main narratives and claims over health issues circulating in the population |
| Activity | 2.2 Inform |
| Main tasks: | • Develop and tailor messages for different populations, utilizing appropriate communication strategies, communication media and channels • Pretest messages among target populations and in different media • Measure the effectiveness of messages in time and media • Partner with medical associations, nongovernmental organizations, traditional and social media, and tech companies to target different stakeholders in the health system • Promote credibility and trust in health authorities and service delivery |
| Domain (3) | 3. Detect and intervene |
| Activity | 3.1 Intervene |
| Main tasks: | • Define the objective of the single intervention or of the multiple interventions, and the target populations • Identify barriers to and facilitators of the planned objective in the target population • Define a model of change and clarify processes which will be used to assess the efficacy of the intervention • Define the various levels the intervention covers, from policy and health system to community and individual levels • Produce the interventions and implement them |
| Activity | 3.2 Counter |
| Main tasks: | • Build or strengthen reporting tools and processes to identify and analyze mis/disinformation • Track mis/disinformation, check facts and trends over time • Work in partnership with stakeholders to identify and act on mis/disinformation rapidly |
| Activity | 3.3 Monitor |
| Main tasks: | • Collect and collate data related to interventions and messages • Estimate the impact of the interventions • Transfer the findings of interventions to improve mis/disinformation correction and management |
| Activity | 3.4 Support |
| Main tasks: | • Design, implement and evaluate interventions to build and strengthen resilience against mis/disinformation, tailored to individual communities and vulnerable populations • Measure community involvement and empowerment • Integrate measures for infodemic resilience into health system standard reporting processes |
| Domain (4) | 4. Strengthen |
| Activity | 4.1 Prepare |
| Main tasks | • Promote building, revision and adoption of policies for IM • Embed IM modules and indicators in all relevant aspects of the public health response • Support and promote interdisciplinarity in institutions’ IM |
| Activity | 4.2 Ongoing monitoring and strategy refinement |
| Main tasks | • Identify and address gaps in IM program design and service delivery • Use implementation research evidence in program improvement and policy development • Document IM processes, analyses and outputs for future use • Promote shared interventions and approaches between countries, including the assessment of factors affecting the transferability of interventions |
| Activity | 4.3 Building capacity |
| Main tasks | • Assess IM training needs within the institution • Set organizational training objectives and create training action plans • Define and plan for internally provided or outsourced training • Implement training initiatives • Evaluate and revise training • Integrate infodemic training within the main processes and services for employees of the institution |
Disciplines and skills of IM according to the domains and activities
| Disciplines involved in IM | Specific skills | IM domains where the specific skills are needed |
|---|---|---|
Advertising Advocacy Argumentation theory Behavioral sciences Cognitive science Communication sciences (from interpersonal to mass communication) Community engagement Complexity science Computational social science Cybersecurity Design Digital health Education and pedagogical sciences Ethics Health campaigns Health communication Health economics Health informatics Health literacy Health service research Health system research Knowledge translation Knowledge dissemination Implementation science Infodemiology and IM (theories, methods, tools, strategies and processes) Institutional development Law Media and Journalism Media literacy Narratology and the rhetoric of narratives Persuasion research Public health (history of public health and best practice) Organizational management Quantitative and qualitative research methods Risk communication Science literacy Scientific journalism Social listening and social media monitoring tools (Social) marketing Social inequalities and health inequity Study design Team communication User experience design (UXD) | • Strengthen and develop all main IM processes within institutions • Identify and apply standards for ethical conduct in IM • Build a network of partners for coordinated IM | Domain 1 Infodemic management |
• Identify mis/disinformation • Utilize research methods, social listening and social media monitoring tools and methods to collect data (online and offline) on an infodemic • Identify targets for IM interventions | Domain 2 Prepare and monitor 2.1. Listen | |
• Tailor health communication and dissemination of health information • Pretest messages for relevance, readability, comprehension and potential impact • Maintain, promote and build trust in health institutions • Communicate with the media • Empower spokespersons to speak on behalf of institutions | Domain 2 Prepare and monitor 2.2. Inform | |
| • Develop and implement interventions that address individual, community, cultural and societal-level factors affecting trust and resilience to misinformation | Domain 3 Detect and intervene 3.1. Intervene | |
• Develop and utilize standard operating procedures to collect, analyze and correct misinformation on various levels • Build and strengthen coordinated work with partner organizations and stakeholders to act on mis/disinformation in a timely way | Domain 3 Detect and intervene 3.2. Counter | |
• Design and conduct impact studies • Reflect on the results of interventions to refine overall institutional strategies against infodemics | Domain 3 Detect and intervene 3.3. Monitor | |
• Use frameworks and research methods to build and evaluate interventions to strengthen individuals’ and communities’ resilience against mis/disinformation • Use theories, frameworks and strategies of communication to build or reinforce trust in institutions | Domain 3 Detect and intervene 3.4. Support | |
• Synthesize and present existing evidence and guidance from IM findings for specific country contexts • Apply principles and tools of knowledge translation from IM findings to empower and reinforce health systems in IM • Promote inter-organizational work and collaboration | Domain 4 Strengthen 4.1. Prepare | |
• Identify strengths and limitations in institutions’ IM programs and procedures • Translate the findings from IM interventions and best practices to strengthen institutions’ strategies • Collect, synthesize and transfer the findings from partners or other relevant institutions | Domain 4 4.2 Ongoing monitoring and strategy refinement | |
• Identify relevant topics, needs and gaps within institutions for IM training • Build institutional relationships with relevant stakeholders (from professional categories to the mass media) • Use the theories, methods and principles of professional learning to design, implement and evaluate training in infodemiology and IM within the institution | Domain 4 4.3 Building capacity |