PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Endorsement of COVID-19 misinformation among criminal legal involved individuals in the United States: Prevalence and relationship with information sources.

  • Xiaoquan Zhao,
  • Aayushi Hingle,
  • Cameron C Shaw,
  • Amy Murphy,
  • Breonna R Riddick,
  • Rochelle R Davidson Mhonde,
  • Bruce G Taylor,
  • Phoebe A Lamuda,
  • Harold A Pollack,
  • John A Schneider,
  • Faye S Taxman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0296752
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. e0296752

Abstract

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Criminal legal system involvement (CLI) is a critical social determinant of health that lies at the intersection of multiple sources of health disparities. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbates many of these disparities, and specific vulnerabilities faced by the CLI population. This study investigated the prevalence of COVID-19-related misinformation, as well as its relationship with COVID-19 information sources used among Americans experiencing CLI. A nationally representative sample of American adults aged 18+ (N = 1,161), including a subsample of CLI individuals (n = 168), were surveyed in February-March 2021. On a 10-item test, CLI participants endorsed a greater number of misinformation statements (M = 1.88 vs. 1.27) than non-CLI participants, p < .001. CLI participants reported less use of government and scientific sources (p = .017) and less use of personal sources (p = .003) for COVID-19 information than non-CLI participants. Poisson models showed that use of government and scientific sources was negatively associated with misinformation endorsement for non-CLI participants (IRR = .841, p < .001), but not for CLI participants (IRR = .957, p = .619). These findings suggest that building and leveraging trust in important information sources are critical to the containment and mitigation of COVID-19-related misinformation in the CLI population.