2017
DOI: 10.3201/eid2301.160589
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Media Messages and Perception of Risk for Ebola Virus Infection, United States

Abstract: News media have been blamed for sensationalizing Ebola in the United States, causing unnecessary alarm. To investigate this issue, we analyzed US-focused news stories about Ebola virus disease during July 1–November 30, 2014. We found frequent use of risk-elevating messages, which may have contributed to increased public concern.

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Cited by 70 publications
(63 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…Arguably, this may have played an important role in individual risk perception. We can speculate that reframing the emergency within a national dimension can amplify the perceived susceptibility of individuals [ 92 , 93 ] and thus increase the adoption of behavioral changes [ 4 , 94 ]. Indeed, previous studies showed that at the beginning of February 2020, people were overly optimistic regarding the risks associated with the new virus circulating in Asia, and their perception sharply changed after the first cases were confirmed in their countries [ 9 , 95 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Arguably, this may have played an important role in individual risk perception. We can speculate that reframing the emergency within a national dimension can amplify the perceived susceptibility of individuals [ 92 , 93 ] and thus increase the adoption of behavioral changes [ 4 , 94 ]. Indeed, previous studies showed that at the beginning of February 2020, people were overly optimistic regarding the risks associated with the new virus circulating in Asia, and their perception sharply changed after the first cases were confirmed in their countries [ 9 , 95 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On September 30th, 2014 the first domestic diagnosis of Ebola occurred in the US. Studies of news media, tweet, and google search volume have identified the one-month period following this event as a time of high interest in Ebola amongst the US population and was thus the most applicable time period for the study goal of analyzing miscommunication during high levels of fear for the US population [24,30].…”
Section: Study Design and Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The final coding instrument included dichotomous yes/ no codes assessing tweet characteristics (e.g. joke, opinion, discord), veracity (true, false, partially false), political context, risk frame [31], health context, Ebola specific messages [30,32], rumors [7], and 23 hashtags previously identified in literature as potentially suspicious or associated with misinformation (Additional File 1) [25]. Two authors (DH and MT) coded tweets using a Google survey form.…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beyond the hospital, Ebola produced a unique public response. Widespread media reporting on the risks of EVD transmission led to public concern and occasional protests, 18 as well as potential stigma and social isolation for international health workers returning home after caring for patients with EVD. 19…”
Section: West Africa Ebola Virus Disease Epidemic 2014 To 2016mentioning
confidence: 99%