Breaking infodemic: discovering SARS-CoV-2

Miguel A. Saavedra-López, Walter Antonio Campos-Ugaz, Josué Edison Turpo Chaparro, Oscar Mamani-Benito, Renzo Felipe Carranza Esteban, Rafael Garay-Argandoña, Oscar Omar Álcazar Aguilar, Martha C. Rodríguez-Vargas, Jacqueline C. Ponce-Meza, Ronald M. Hernández

Resumen


In that time, millions of people went online for entertainment, education, etc. Consequently, the use of the Internet increased, bringing, on the one hand, online education, and entertainment on the Internet, ensuring social distancing; and on the other hand, it brought new new risks to human life, among them rumors. In this way and given the large number of publications that could denote the level of misinformation about COVID-19 and the impact it could have on global public health, various scientific publications were analyzed and identified from a bibliometric point of view. Potential relationships between the descriptors obtained from the bibliometric search were identified. The results were conglomerated into 5 clusters: Cluster 1, related to studies on access to information provided on COVID-19; cluster 2 shows the list of studies that have been carried out on the information on the COVID-19 vaccine, cluster 3 analyzes the different responses given by conspiracy theories, rumors and misinformation about COVID-19, the Group 4 shows cross-sectional and longitudinal research on COVID-19 and the information it provides to the health sector, and cluster 5 represents studies on scientific production and communication that have contributed to global health during the pandemic.


Palabras clave


promotion, health, infpdemic, COVID-19

Texto completo:

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Referencias


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