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An empirical investigation of precursors influencing social media health information behaviors and personal healthcare habits during coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic

Muhammad Riaz (School of Management, Jilin University, Changchun, China)
Xiwei Wang (School of Management, Jilin University, Changchun, China)
Sherani (School of Management Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, Henan, China)
Yu Guo (School of Management, Jilin University, Changchun, China)

Information Discovery and Delivery

ISSN: 2398-6247

Article publication date: 27 November 2020

Issue publication date: 22 September 2021

842

Abstract

Purpose

Drawing upon the communicative ecology theory (CET), this study aims to identify the potential precursors of social media health information seeking intentions (ISI) and examine their effects on health information re-sharing behaviors and PHH during coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Design/methodology/approach

The data is collected through an online survey conducted in two different universities situated in highly COVID-19-affected cities – Wuhan and Zhengzhou, China. The valid data consists of 230 useful responses from WeChat users and to analyze the final data set structural equation modeling (SEM) is used.

Findings

The results indicate that perceived health information credibility (PIC), trust on the medium (TRM) and peer influence (PI) significantly affect health ISI which further affects health information re-sharing behaviors (IRB) and personal health-care habits (PHH). Besides, the results also identify that PI has a direct, positive and significant effect on health IRB via social media during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Research limitations/implications

This study investigates the health information intentional behavior precursors and their consequences via WeChat (taken as social media platform) during COVID-19 pandemic. Future studies may conduct research by examining online information behaviors on other social media platforms – Twitter, WhatsApp, Facebook, etc. – in health emergency situations.

Practical implications

The health information producers and providers have to deal with communicative ecology sentiments elegantly in emergency situations such as during the COVID-19 pandemic. They need to do collective efforts by introducing new tools or social apps which deal with valuable, reliable and accurate health content and information generated by the pandemic experts and health professionals. In such a way, the social apps and tools (Information providers) will act as mediators between the health professionals (Information producers) and general social media users (information seekers). Such initiatives will ultimately bring forth positive effect on individuals’ PHH as a whole within a network, community, environment or nations during a health emergency – COVID-19 pandemic.

Originality/value

This research is one of the first studies to examine the potential precursors of social media health ISIs and their resultant effects on individual’s health IRB and PHH during the COVID-19 pandemic. As currently it is noticed, an incredible upsurge of health information via social media has intense impacts on personal health-care research and practice, particularly during health emergency situations such as COVID-19 pandemic conditions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research is sponsored by the international Innovation Team of Philosophy and Science of Jilin University and Major Project of the National Social Science Fund “Big data–driven theme map construction and regulation strategy research of social network public opinion” (18ZDA310).

Citation

Riaz, M., Wang, X., , S. and Guo, Y. (2021), "An empirical investigation of precursors influencing social media health information behaviors and personal healthcare habits during coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic", Information Discovery and Delivery, Vol. 49 No. 3, pp. 225-239. https://doi.org/10.1108/IDD-06-2020-0070

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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