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How Americans Make Sense of Two Novel Pandemics.

Edward L FinkRachel A SmithDeborah A CaiHeeyoung Jenni JungJoseph Woelfel
Published in: Health communication (2021)
Using Galileo theory and method of multidimensional scaling (MDS), we compared the psychological distances between concepts related to two pandemic viruses, Zika and COVID-19. Surveys (Zika, N = 410; COVID-19, N = 291) were used to investigate the role of media use and interpersonal communication on the relationship between 10 concepts in multidimensional spaces. We asked these four research questions: Do the two spaces represent the two pandemics similarly? What is the relationship of me and of people to each pandemic? What is the effect of virus-related media use and interpersonal talk on the pandemic space? What are optimal messages for moving me closer to Zika and to COVID-19? Media use influenced the distances for both pandemics: With greater media use, the concepts were closer in the Zika space and further apart in the COVID-19 space. Interpersonal communication was associated with few differences in the spaces. Based on the psychological distances between concepts, optimal messages were identified: For Zika, a message with two concepts, people and women, is predicted to be most effective to move Zika to the concept me, whereas for COVID-19, a message with people is predicted to be most effective to move COVID-19 to me.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • zika virus
  • dengue virus
  • aedes aegypti
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • depressive symptoms