Information Sources and Anxiety among Refugees in Kenya during COVID-19

08/23/2021
by   Matthew A. McGee, et al.
0

In the COVID-19 pandemic, refugees' access to information has become increasingly important given the rapid change in the scientific and public health knowledge-base. However, this access is complicated by social distancing requirements that disrupt traditional in-person communication. Many refugees must then rely on alternative information sources to stay informed. Differences in media types and information sources in turn may be related to anxieties arising from the virus and perceptions of others' adherence to recommended protective behaviors. We examine these relationships with survey data from 1,000 refugees living in both camps and non-camp settings in Kenya. Using logit models, we test relationships between information source and anxiety and the effect of these variables on refugees' expected behaviors of community members. Our primary contributions include the finding that information sources consistently exacerbate (e.g., Facebook) or ameliorate (e.g., news from the internet) different anxieties, or can have mixed effects (e.g., radio). We also find that anxiety and information have significant impacts on refugees' expectations of compliance by others and that, whether between camps or between camps and non-camp locales, findings vary by location. Our results have implications for refugee media and infectious disease anxiety scholarship as well as for managing infectious disease response.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
03/24/2021

Consistency between household and county measures of K-12 onsite schooling during the COVID-19 pandemic

The academic, socioemotional, and health impacts of school policies thro...
research
06/10/2020

Pandemic Pulse: Unraveling and Modeling Social Signals during the COVID-19 Pandemic

We present and begin to explore a collection of social data that represe...
research
01/29/2021

The growth of COVID-19 scientific literature: A forecast analysis of different daily time series in specific settings

We present a forecasting analysis on the growth of scientific literature...
research
04/20/2020

Why do People Share Misinformation during the COVID-19 Pandemic?

The World Health Organization have emphasised that misinformation - spre...
research
03/26/2021

YouTubing at Home: Media Sharing Behavior Change as Proxy for MobilityAround COVID-19 Lockdowns

Compliance with public health measures, such as restrictions on movement...
research
10/05/2019

Keyword Spotter Model for Crop Pest and Disease Monitoring from Community Radio Data

In societies with well developed internet infrastructure, social media i...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset