Inclusive Crisis Communication in a Pandemic Context: A Rapid Review

Crisis communication might not reach non-native speakers or persons with low literacy levels, a low socio-economic status, and/or an auditory or visual impairments as easily as it would reach other citizens. The aim of this rapid review was to synthesize the evidence on strategies used to improve in...

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Published inInternational journal of environmental research and public health Vol. 21; no. 9; p. 1216
Main Authors Hannes, Karin, Thyssen, Pieter, Bengough, Theresa, Dawson, Shoba, Paque, Kristel, Talboom, Sarah, Tuand, Krizia, Vandendriessche, Thomas, van de Veerdonk, Wessel, Wopereis, Daniëlle, Vandamme, Anne-Mieke
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 16.09.2024
MDPI
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Summary:Crisis communication might not reach non-native speakers or persons with low literacy levels, a low socio-economic status, and/or an auditory or visual impairments as easily as it would reach other citizens. The aim of this rapid review was to synthesize the evidence on strategies used to improve inclusive pandemic-related crisis communication in terms of form, channel, and outreach. After a comprehensive search and a rigorous screening and quality assessment exercise, twelve comparative studies were selected for inclusion in this review. Data were analyzed and represented by means of a structured reporting of available effects using narrative tables. The findings indicate that a higher message frequency (on any channel) may lead to a lower recall rate, audio-visual productions and tailored messages prove to be valuable under certain conditions, and primary healthcare practitioners appear to be the most trusted source of information for most groups of citizens. Trust levels were higher for citizens who were notified in advance of potential exceptions to the rule in the effect of preventive and curative measures promoted. This review contributes to combatting information inequality by providing evidence on how to remove the sensorial, linguistic, cultural, and textual barriers experienced by minorities and other underserved target audiences in COVID-19-related governmental crisis communication in response to the societal, health-related costs of ineffective communication outreach.
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These authors share the first authorship.
ISSN:1660-4601
1661-7827
1660-4601
DOI:10.3390/ijerph21091216