A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review of the Impacts of Coronavirus on Society and Culture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Selection Criteria
2.2. Data Sources and Data Abstraction
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Reviewed Studies
3.1.1. Study Sites and Publication Period
3.1.2. Study Design and Target Population
3.2. Theme
3.2.1. Governance
3.2.2. Crisis Communication and Public Knowledge
3.2.3. Stigma and Discrimination
3.2.4. Social Compliance of Preventive Measures
3.2.5. Social Experience as Healthcare Workers
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors (Year) | Ref # | Theme 1 Governance | Theme 2 Communication and Public Knowledge | Theme 3 Stigma and Discrimination | Theme 4 Social Compliance | Theme 5 Health Workers | Study Site | Study Sample and Size | Study Design |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O’Sullivan et al. (2007) | 6 | Governance | Health Workers | Canada | 12 emergency plans | Qualitative content analysis | |||
Almutairi et al. (2015) | 8 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Social Compliance | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | 1147 male and female Saudis and expatriates 18 years and older in shopping malls | Quantitative Cross-sectional | |||
Wallis & Nerlich (2005) | 5 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Stigma and discrimination | United Kingdom | 5 UK newspapers | Qualitative linguistic method | |||
Alqahtani et al. (2016) | 12 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Social Compliance | Australia | 356 Australian Hajj pilgrims | Quantitative Two Cross-sectional surveys | |||
Choi & Kim (2018) | 11 | Stigma and discrimination | Health Workers | South Korea (3 cities) | 169 emergency nurses | Quantitative Cross-sectional | |||
Park (2017) | 21 | Governance | South Korea | Legislative procedure of the Infectious Disease Control and Prevention Act | N/A | ||||
Ludolph et al. (2018) | 9 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Hong Kong, China | 533 Hong Kong residents | Quantitative Cross-sectional survey | ||||
Park et al. (2018) | 7 | Governance | Stigma and discrimination | Health Workers | Gyeonggi, South Korea | 187 nurses | Quantitative Cross-sectional exploratory | ||
de Zwart et al. (2009) | 20 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Europe (5 countries) and Asia (3 countries) | 3436 respondents interviewed over the phone | Quantitative Survey | ||||
Eichelberger (2007) | 3 | Stigma and discrimination | New York City, NY | 37 community members of New York’s Chinatown | Qualitative Participant observation | ||||
Straus et al. (2004) | 29 | Health Workers | Toronto, Canada | 14 physicians in specialties involving SARS patients | Qualitative interviews | ||||
Des Jarlais et al. (2005) | 24 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Stigma and discrimination | New York City, NY | 1832 New York City residents | Quantitative Phone interview | |||
Voeton et al. (2009) | 27 | Communication and Public Knowledge | United Kingdom and The Netherlands | 299 British and Dutch Chinese people’s knowledge of SARS compared to 804 British and Dutch non-Chinese people | Quantitative Computer assisted phone survey | ||||
Yoo et al. (2016) | 10 | Communication and Public Knowledge | Social Compliance | South Korea | 1000 Korean adults 19 or older of nationally represented demographics | Quantitative Online survey | |||
Oh et al. (2020) | 28 | Communication and Public Knowledge | South Korea | 400 individuals chosen based on age, gender, and region | Quantitative Online survey | ||||
Cava et al. (2005) | 25 | Stigma and discrimination | Toronto, Canada | 21 English speaking individuals exposed to SARS during the outbreak in Toronto | Qualitative | ||||
Qiu et al. (2018) | 30 | Stigma and discrimination | China | Literature review, document analysis, and 26 in-depth interviews with key stakeholders were conducted. | Qualitative case study | ||||
Siu (2008) | 4 | Stigma and discrimination | Hong Kong, China | 200 members of a self-help group for SARS victims, 30 participated in in-depth semi-structured interviews. | Qualitative participant observation | ||||
Gautret et al. (2016) | 22 | Social Compliance | Middle East | Large scale surveillance study of people traveling back to the Middle East. | Quantitative Surveillance study | ||||
Affonso et al. (2003) | 2 | Health Workers | Toronto, Canada | Reviewed public health records, governmental and non-governmental health statements, initial epidemiological research done on SARS, and firsthand experiences of healthcare systems. | N/A | ||||
Crawford et al. (2016) | 26 | Governance | N/A | 21 individuals who were key responders in recent epidemics participated in interviews. | Qualitative Non-systematic review | ||||
Alhomoud and Alhomoud (2017) | 23 | Social Compliance | Mecca, Saudi Arabia | 257 pilgrims that participated in Hajj 2015 who were 18+ and spoke English or Arabic | Quantitative Cross-sectional study |
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Yu, Y.J.; Park, Y.S.; Keller, A.; Noh, J.-W.; Cha, J. A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review of the Impacts of Coronavirus on Society and Culture. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 491. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020491
Yu YJ, Park YS, Keller A, Noh J-W, Cha J. A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review of the Impacts of Coronavirus on Society and Culture. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):491. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020491
Chicago/Turabian StyleYu, Yeon Jung, Young Su Park, Alison Keller, Jin-Won Noh, and Jiho Cha. 2021. "A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review of the Impacts of Coronavirus on Society and Culture" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 491. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020491
APA StyleYu, Y. J., Park, Y. S., Keller, A., Noh, J. -W., & Cha, J. (2021). A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review of the Impacts of Coronavirus on Society and Culture. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(2), 491. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020491