COVID-19 Infodemic and Public Trust from the Perspective of Public and Global Mental Health.

Psychiatr Danub

Department of Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, Kišpatićeva 12, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia,

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Participants in a crisis, like the COVID-19 pandemic, often experience both trust and distrust towards each other, impacting collective health and mental well-being.
  • The spread of misinformation and lack of faith in authorities can lead to negative health behaviors, enhancing mental health issues, which then perpetuates a cycle of distrust and conspiracy thinking.
  • Addressing this requires a comprehensive understanding of the interconnectedness between public trust, mental health, and the dynamics of social and political relationships on both local and global scales.

Article Abstract

Crisis usually involves participants who trust and distrust each other, commonly in the same time. COVID-19 infodemic induced confidence crisis and distrust in authorities, science communities, governments and institutions can lead to harmful health behaviors and ill mental health and become a serious threat to public and global mental health as another kind of virus. Distrust mentality, conspiracy thinking and blame games may have detrimental effects not just on the individual level, but on the level of the whole groups, communities and global world. Public distrust and mistrust are related to the crisis in the domain of social and political relations, not only on the same country level, but also between different countries at regional or global level. Dynamics between public trust and mental health is a complex and bidirectional, ill mental health is causing and enhancing the inclination to confidence crisis, distrust, conspiracy theories and blame games and vice versa confidence crisis, distrust, conspiracy thinking and blame games are leading to ill mental health. It is important to have a holistic transdisciplinary integrative understanding of these dynamics and science-based treatment and prevention.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.24869/psyd.2020.449DOI Listing

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