The effects of quality of evidence communication on perception of public health information about COVID-19: Two randomised controlled trials.

Authors
Schneider, Claudia R  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6612-5186
Freeman, Alexandra LJ  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4115-161X
Spiegelhalter, David 
van der Linden, Sander 

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Article
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The quality of evidence about the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical health interventions is often low, but little is known about the effects of communicating indications of evidence quality to the public. METHODS: In two blinded, randomised, controlled, online experiments, US participants (total n = 2140) were shown one of several versions of an infographic illustrating the effectiveness of eye protection in reducing COVID-19 transmission. Their trust in the information, understanding, feelings of effectiveness of eye protection, and the likelihood of them adopting it were measured. FINDINGS: Compared to those given no quality cues, participants who were told the quality of the evidence on eye protection was 'low', rated the evidence less trustworthy (p = .001, d = 0.25), and rated it as subjectively less effective (p = .018, d = 0.19). The same effects emerged compared to those who were told the quality of the evidence was 'high', and in one of the two studies, those shown 'low' quality of evidence said they were less likely to use eye protection (p = .005, d = 0.18). Participants who were told the quality of the evidence was 'high' showed no statistically significant differences on these measures compared to those given no information about evidence quality. CONCLUSIONS: Without quality of evidence cues, participants responded to the evidence about the public health intervention as if it was high quality and this affected their subjective perceptions of its efficacy and trust in the provided information. This raises the ethical dilemma of weighing the importance of transparently stating when the evidence base is actually low quality against evidence that providing such information can decrease trust, perception of intervention efficacy, and likelihood of adopting it.

Publication Date
2021
Online Publication Date
2021-11-17
Acceptance Date
2021-10-11
Keywords
Adult, COVID-19, Communication, Humans, Public Health
Journal Title
PLoS One
Journal ISSN
1932-6203
1932-6203
Volume Title
16
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Sponsorship
David And Claudia Harding Foundation (unknown)