2022
DOI: 10.1002/wmh3.522
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Communication in context: How culture, structure, and agency shape health and risk communication about COVID‐19 in Ghana

Abstract: Despite impressive strides toward proper health education about the pandemic, in resource‐limited contexts, health information dissemination occurs within a structural context that restricts the enactment of agency and further marginalizes the most vulnerable. Through observations of and reflections about Ghana's work in health communication about the COVID‐19 pandemic, this essay examines the key processes and outcomes of COVID‐19 information dissemination in Ghana, highlighting the structural factors that co… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(20 reference statements)
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“…The Chinese groups differ with respect to dialect, culture, and political beliefs [20]. As a vulnerable immigrant group during COVID-19, this sample was sufficiently heterogeneous to allow researchers to reveal multiple social barriers (i.e., beyond ethnicity and English language fluency) to seeking help during COVID-19 [21].…”
Section: Study Design Location and Research Questionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Chinese groups differ with respect to dialect, culture, and political beliefs [20]. As a vulnerable immigrant group during COVID-19, this sample was sufficiently heterogeneous to allow researchers to reveal multiple social barriers (i.e., beyond ethnicity and English language fluency) to seeking help during COVID-19 [21].…”
Section: Study Design Location and Research Questionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, perceived behavioural control determins the perceived ease or difficulty of carrying out the behaviour [49,50]. In this regard, behavioural beliefs can influence how people exhibit a positive or negative attitude towards the behaviour [52] It has been established that peoples' beliefs related to social institutions (opinion leaders and sociopolitical institutions) and behavioural-related factors characterised by trust, attitudes, knowledge, awareness, and perceived side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine are influential on the willingness or intention to be vaccinated [9,53,54].…”
Section: Social and Behavioural Barriersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Public health communications have been complicated and rendered less effective due to inequitable vaccine access in Ghana (Adekunle & Mohammed 2022) and Kenya (Orangi et al 2021), as well as South Africa and Zimbabwe (Dzinamarira et al 2021). The same is true elsewhere on the continent, as 57 percent of respondents in a Kenyan study (Orangi et al 2021) and 74.5 percent of respondents in a Nigerian study (Adebisi et al 2021) expressed the desire to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.…”
Section: Waithoodmentioning
confidence: 99%