Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211768
Title: Diversity of covid?19 news media coverage across 17 countries: The influence of cultural values, government stringency and pandemic severity
Authors: Ng, Reuben 
Tan, Yi Wen 
Keywords: COVID?19
Cultural values
Digital humanities
Newspapers
Pandemic
Public health
Public policy
Quantitative social science
Text as data
Issue Date: 9-Nov-2021
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Ng, Reuben, Tan, Yi Wen (2021-11-09). Diversity of covid?19 news media coverage across 17 countries: The influence of cultural values, government stringency and pandemic severity. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18 (22) : 11768. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211768
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: The current media studies of COVID?19 devote asymmetrical attention to social media; in contrast, newspapers have received comparatively less attention. Newspapers are an integral source of current information that are syndicated and amplified by social media to a wide global audience. This is one of the first known studies to operationalize news media diversity and examine its association with cultural values during the pandemic. We tracked the global diversity of COVID?19 coverage in a news media database of 12 billion words, collated from 28 million articles over 7000 news websites, across 8 months. Media diversity was measured weekly by the number of unique descriptors of 10 target terms of the pandemic (e.g., COVID?19, coronavirus) and normalized by the corpus size for the respective countries per week. Government Stringency was taken from the Oxford COVID?19 Government Response Tracker and cultural scores were taken from Hofstede’s Cultural Values global database. Results showed that Media Diversity Rate increased 6.7 times over 8 months, from the baseline period (October–December 2019) to during the pandemic (January–May 2020). Mixed effects modelling revealed that higher COVID?19 prevalence rates and governmental stringency predicted this increase. Interestingly, collectivist cultures are linked to more diverse media coverage during COVID?19. It is possible that news outlets in collectivist societies are motivated to present a diverse array of topics given the impact of COVID?19 on every segment of society. Of broader significance, we provided a framework to design targeted public health communications that are culturally nuanced. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Source Title: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/233104
ISSN: 1661-7827
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182211768
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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