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Pandemic Communication: Information Seeking, Evaluation, and Self-Protective Behaviors in Vietnam and the Republic of Korea

DIers-Lawson School of Public Relations and Journalism, Leeds Business School, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom|
Kisoo (57315473900) | Long Hoang (56567321800); Park | Bach Xuan (57209107515); Nguyen Graduate School of Public Administration, Hansung University, Seoul, South Korea| Riko (57314226800); Tran Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden| Teela (57314436600); Kimoto Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States| Sophie (57315473800); Clayton Institute for Preventative Medicine and Public Health, Hanoi Medical University, Hanoi, Viet Nam| Audra (55789359700); Johnson International Public Health, Asia-Europe Foundation (ASEF), Singapore, Singapore|

Frontiers in Communication Số , năm 2021 (Tập 6, trang -)

ISSN: 2297900X

ISSN: 2297900X

DOI: 10.3389/fcomm.2021.731979

Tài liệu thuộc danh mục:

Article

English

Tóm tắt tiếng anh
Saliou (Eur J Epidemiol, 1994, 10 (4), 515-517) argued that pandemics are special kinds of crises and requires the public health sector to focus on: 1) reducing uncertainty, 2) rumor mitigation, and 3) ensuring the public reduces their risk of contracting the disease. With this as a backdrop, the central aim of this research is to better understand the connections between public information seeking, evaluation, and self-protective behaviors in the COVID-19 pandemic and focuses on a comparison between the Republic of Korea and Vietnam to provide insights into the influence of the individual, institutional, and information factors influencing people's experience with COVID-19. Thus, there are two major contributions of this study. First, it provides a cross-theory evaluation of the factors that contribute to information seeking, evaluation, and self-protective behaviors. Second, the study identifies potentially critical differences in information seeking, evaluation, and self-protective behaviors based on acute disease reproduction in countries with a successful pandemic suppression history. Findings suggest that in countries where there are high levels of trust and satisfaction even small changes in the infection rates lead to different information seeking and self-protective behaviors. � Diers-Lawson, Johnson, Clayton, Kimoto, Tran, Nguyen and Park.

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