Next Article in Journal
Association between Nutrition Literacy and Bangladeshi Adults’ Healthy Eating Behaviors: Evidence from the Nutrition Literacy Study 2021
Previous Article in Journal
Nursing Diagnoses of Individuals with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Research Protocol for a Qualitative Synthesis
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Eight-Element Communication Model for Internet Health Rumors: A New Exploration of Lasswell’s “5W Communication Model”

1
Public Management College, Guangxi University, Nanning 530004, China
2
Public Health and Management College, Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, Nanning 530200, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Healthcare 2022, 10(12), 2507; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122507
Submission received: 26 October 2022 / Revised: 3 December 2022 / Accepted: 5 December 2022 / Published: 11 December 2022

Abstract

:
(1) Background: Rumors are a special type of information. Based on the classic theory of the communication of information, the “5W” communication model, this article aims to build a new model and thus explains the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. (2) Methods: The authors selected 50 Internet health rumors, which were widely spread in widely used websites and social media in China, then grounded theory is used to perform the qualitative analysis of the Internet health rumors. (3) Results: Three Core Concepts are abstracted after qualitative analysis. An internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism of the communication of rumors is built and illustrated. Based on Lasswell’s “5W” communication model, the authors develop an eight-element communication model for Internet health rumors to illustrate the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. (4) Conclusions: By removing one or several elements of this new model, the chain of the communication of Internet health rumors could be cut off, which is valuable information for the government or websites to manage communication of Internet health rumors.

1. Introduction

We are surrounded by health rumors. When a pandemic rages, health rumors spread even more rapidly. The COVID-19 pandemic is the most recent example. Compared with traditional rumors, Internet rumors are characterized by faster spreading, wider influence, greater social harm, higher professionalism, greater concealment, and larger temptation. The Internet is gradually becoming an important platform for people to gain health information that is easily made up and spread. Against the backdrop of the “Healthy China” strategy, the governance of Internet health rumors has become one of the difficult problems faced by the Chinese government. The Chinese government has strengthened the governance of Internet rumors, but there are many problems with rumor control.
This study focuses on the micro-level of Internet health rumors to profoundly explore the flexibility and applicability of the 5W communication model based on three questions, “How are Internet health rumors generated?” “How are Internet health rumors spread?”, and “How do elements of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors interact with each other?” A new theoretical communication model is constructed to answer the questions about Internet health rumors.

2. Literature Review

As stated in Webster’s Dictionary of the English Language, rumor refers to gossip, talk, or opinion without a discernible source or known authority for its truth. With rumors in Massachusetts as the case, Knapp initially studied the causes, consequences, and control strategies of rumors [1]. The process of rumor spreading was concisely described by formulas and models by several scholars. Allport believes that rumor = importance (event) × fuzziness (event), pointing out the direct proportion between the occurrence of rumor and the importance and fuzziness of events [2]. Chorus improved this formula into rumor = importance (event) ×fuzziness (event) × critical ability of the public, believing that rumor spreading is correlated with the public’s critical ability [3]. Other models of communication of rumors are also proposed.
Among the Internet rumors, health rumors are the worst. False information spreads significantly farther and faster than true information does [4]. Health misinformation also applies to this rule. For example, misinformation about the Zika virus was three times more likely to be shared than verified stories on social media sites [5]. The reason is that health misinformation was novel and resulted in more emotions such as disgust, fear, and surprise [4] (p.2). Scholars proposed specific ways to reduce the spread of health misinformation. For example, rumor-dispelling warnings such as “this tweet may contain misinformation” would decrease users’ likelihood of sharing a health rumor [6]. Additionally, the corrective health information posted by experts or authoritative institutions on social media can reduce the dissemination of health misinformation effectively. [7]
The 5W communication model provides a theoretical basis for explaining the propagation mechanism of Internet health rumors. The spread of Internet health rumors is a subdivision of information dissemination. When it comes to information dissemination, it is necessary to mention the well-known “5W communication model”. American sociologist Harold Lasswell officially put forward the “5W model” in his book The Structure and Function of Communication in Society [8]. The “5W” refers to Who, What, In Which Channel, To Whom, and With What Effect. There are different attitudes towards the contribution of Lasswell and his 5W model of communication, which has triggered heated debates in the academia. Shoemaker, Tankard, and Lasorsa consider that the “5W model” was one of the earliest and most influential communication models [9]. Biagi (2013) considers it to be one of the primary drivers behind current conceptions of mass communication [10]. However, McQuail believes it to be conceptually dated due to its linear orientation [11]. Especially after the emergence of the Internet, considering the impact of the Internet on the 5W model, the scholar maintains that the study on communication should break through the bottleneck of linear structure and be promoted to a perspective of media and social relations [12].
To sum up, those who support the 5W model believe that the 5W model effectively illustrates the process and elements of information dissemination in society, and the model still has its explanatory power and applicability even to this day. The opposing view is that the 5W model is outdated and unable to adapt to the environment of the Internet, but few researchers have put forward any improvement plans. This study holds that we should dialectically explore new value and application of the 5W model rather than simply support or oppose it. For instance, by expanding the five elements, Peng found that “Under new media environment, communication process and the research of such five elements will have greater opportunities and broader prospects for development [13].” We quite agree with the view of Sapienza who believes that Lasswell’s construct is inherently flexible enough to meet the theoretical needs of today’s scholars [14]. On this basis, the process and elements of information dissemination described by the 5W model can provide a theoretical basis and analytical framework for this study, and the 5W model is also believed to be applicable and expandable at the micro level of Internet health rumors.

3. Materials and Methods

3.1. Sources of Text Materials

We collected 50 Internet health rumors which are widely spread as text materials. Institutions for science communication, social media, news websites, and government would release the lists for the most popular Internet rumors in the field of health and science—for example, China Association for Science and Technology, WeChat, Sina website, Toutiao website, and Beijing News, etc. The topics are usually about food safety, medicine safety, and environment issues. The rumors appeared from 2014 to 2019. We selected the classic Internet health rumors from these lists. These rumors are suitable to serve as empirical data. According to the generation mechanism of these text materials, it is possible to explain the mechanism and pattern of generation and dissemination of Internet rumors.
The information for 50 Internet health rumors is in Appendix A, including title of rumor, name of the lists, the platforms, and website addresses.

3.2. Coding Program

3.2.1. Coding Procedure

This qualitative study is based on text materials. With the coding technology of the grounded theory, the Nvivo12.0 software is used to encode the data step by step, until it reaches theoretical saturation when there is no new concept. The grounded theory requires researchers to carry out two parts of work. (1) Open coding is the initial stage of constant comparative analysis, before delimiting the coding to a core category and its properties [15]. (2) Selective coding means that “the analyst delimits coding to only those variables that relate to the core variable in sufficiently significant ways to be used in a parsimonious theory” [16].
In this study, the coding technology of the grounded theory is applied in two aspects. First of all, open coding is conducted by labeling the content related to the basic theme in the text materials and recording the feelings after reading the text materials. Secondly, selective coding is to sort and classify the labels, refine the key factors of the generation and dissemination of Internet health rumors, and summarize the internal relationships among the key factors.

3.2.2. Reliability and Validity

A unified standard improves the validity of qualitative research. The research team formulated a detailed coding guideline through discussion and selected two analysts to code separately by following the coding guideline. The cross-validation shows that 90% of the nodes coded by the two analysts are consistent. Code comparison verifies the reliability of the qualitative study. The coding nodes achieved full coverage of the 50 Internet health rumors from 2014 to 2019, and no new nodes appeared, which indicated high validity of the coding results.

3.2.3. Results of Coding of Text Materials

After open coding, the text materials are summarized as 55 Primary Concepts (see Table 1). The grounded theory requires the researchers to conduct selective coding to generalize the Primary Concepts to Core Concepts. During the process of the first selective coding, the team classified the Primary Concepts into nine Category Concepts (See Table 2). For the second selective coding, nine Category Concepts are generalized into three Core Concepts, that is, Correlation, Credibility, and Communication (See Table 3).

4. Discussion

4.1. Generation of Three Core Concepts and Their Relationship

4.1.1. Generation Based on Correlation and Credibility

“Correlation” is the prerequisite for the generation of Internet health rumors. The public’s actual demands for health information have led to the generation of Internet health rumors. Based on the results of open coding, regarding the groups of people that are targeted, Internet health rumors related to children’s health are responded to most frequently, with such rumors being encoded 45 times among the 13 text materials. Regarding the fields of the health issue involved, the highest response frequency was found in Internet health rumors about food safety, with such rumors being encoded 65 times among the 17 text materials (Figure 1). The frequent occurrence of Internet health rumors concerning children’s health and food safety is associated with the psychology of caring for children by parents and the concern about the food. In addition, when fabricating a fictitious person or place in a vivid context, Internet health rumors are becoming seemingly authentic. Hence, Internet health rumors have been closely related to the health issues of different groups of people. Hence, the rumors attract different groups of people to read and focus on.
“Credibility” guarantees the generation of Internet health rumors. The Category Concept “Faking real information” is a common trick for generating Internet health rumors, the Category Concept “fuzzy truth” is a necessary condition for generating Internet health rumors, and the Category Concept “Claiming as reliable information” makes Internet health rumors more mysterious. As early as 1947, the generation of rumors was proportional to the importance and fuzziness of events. Credibility directly determines the “quality” of Internet health rumors.

4.1.2. Communication by Duplication and Variation

The ultimate goal of rumor mongers is to spread Internet health rumors. From the selective coding results, the Core Concept “Communication” involved 49 text materials and is encoded 713 times as the most frequently encoded core category. Moreover, according to the coding frequency of 50 text materials in the core category matrix, except for “Claiming as reliable information”, Core Concepts “Correlation” and “Credibility” highly frequently respond to the concept “Communication” as shown in Table 4.
The spread of Internet health rumors mainly refers to duplication and variation. First of all, duplication needs to attract the attention of the public, with the eye-catching headline being the most representative approach. Secondly, it is necessary to meet psychology of the public. When people are anxious about topics related to themselves, they create and spread rumors [17]. Fear of cancer and curiosity are the main psychological motivation for the public to spread Internet health rumors. Thirdly, to extensively spread Internet health rumors, secondary transmission is induced. It is manifested in different ways. For example, the Primary Concept of “moral kidnapping” means the health rumors are connected it to the receivers’ families (e.g., “Just spread it out, simply for the health of your family”). Videos’ commentary makes rumors incendiary. Taking advantage of rumor’s derivatives is the way that using another rumor to verify the original rumor which makes them more credible. Economic benefits are used as the bait to spread the rumors (e.g., rumor mongers distribute a small amount of money in a chatting room in “WeChat” to stimulate spreading). The key factor “acquaintances” induce the varied communication of Internet health rumors. Rumors do not come from strangers, but from our acquaintances [18]. For example, the function “Moments” of social media is the best place for posting articles, pictures and videos. Internet health rumors are shared and posted there and are easily shared by other friends with a simple click. The spread of Internet health rumors is intensified by the promotion of “acquaintances”. Even health issues that originally have little to do with people become closer to life simply due to the recommendation, comments, or spread by acquaintances. They are particularly able to stimulate, trigger, or arouse people’s attention even if it is only browsing [19].

4.1.3. Internal Dynamic Mutual Assistance Mechanism

Correlation, Credibility, and Communication are the three key factors of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. Correlation, as the source power, triggers Credibility if people have great demands for health information but insufficient knowledge about health. Credibility promotes communication. Studies have shown that high credibility increases trust and the intention to share rumors [20]. Credibility makes rumors more persuasive, especially for Internet users who lack the motivation to process information [21]. Moreover, communication also affects credibility. According to the spiral of silence theory, when people holding certain opinions are in the “minority”, they tend to remain silent so as not to be isolated [22]. In the Internet environment, people who hold minority opinions tend to remain silent or even join the majority to protect themselves from cyber violence. Consequently, recurrent rumors are reinforced and become credible, because people do not spread rumors that they do not believe. They only believe what they choose to believe. Spreading dreadful rumors verify their prejudices to share feelings of fear and reduce discomfort [23]. Therefore, when rumors are spread to a certain degree, their correlation and credibility will be strengthened, as shown in Table 4. Figure 2 shows the relationship among Correlation, Credibility, and Communication and the process of the formation of Core Concepts from Primary Concepts.

4.2. Eight-Element Communication Model for Internet Health Rumors

The Internet environment diversifies the elements of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. Internet health rumors cannot exist independently in Internet environment, and their generation and communication are deeply influenced by the external environment, especially in the era of “new media”.
The 5W communication model provides the theoretical basis for the communication of Internet health rumors. Harold Lasswell proposed the “5W” communication model in his book The Structure and Function of Communication in Society. “5W” represents “Who”, “What”, “In Which Channel”, “To Whom”, and “With What Effect” (Figure 3). The 5W communication model has the value of application and the room for extension. The application to the area of Internet health rumors is worth exploring.
“Who” is expanded to rumor mongers and refuters, and “What” is enlarged to Internet health rumor information, rumor-dispelling information, and hot events. To release their stress and tension [24] and take revenge on the society [25], rumor mongers make up Internet health rumors. The Internet environment is thereby filled with health rumors. Internet rumors severely endanger national political security, social stability, economic security, and social order [26]. Therefore, the government, authoritative media, and other rumor refuters do not allow the generation and communication of Internet health rumors.
Rumor refuters and mongers fight against each other, and rumor-dispelling information released by rumor refuters compete with Internet health rumors on the Internet. For example, the original text of Internet health rumors in some of the 50 samples are hardly found on the Internet because these rumors are dispelled by the government, scientific research institutions, authoritative media, and social media platforms. For these rumors, they are seen in the text of rumor-dispelling information as objects of analysis. Therefore, only rumor-dispelling information is shown to the public and the communication chain of the rumors is cut off. Thus, rumor refuter and rumor-dispelling information as new elements are necessarily added in the new communication model.
Hot events are likely to induce the public to emotionally spread Internet rumor information based on their prior experience [27]. Hot events have a weighted effect on the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. In this study, Internet health rumors which are widely spread are caused by hot events related to food safety, drug safety, disease, environment, and psychology. The hot events are closed to quality of life, health, and life, so it easily triggers the emotion of the public and leads to virus-like dissemination. For instance, due to the frequent occurrence of hot events related to food safety, the Internet health rumor that “spotted eggs are poisonous” in 2018 was highly similar to a short video popular in 2015. Thus, hot events is brought into the new communication model as a new element.
“In Which Channel” refers to the diversification of media channels. In the Internet environment, the media that spread Internet health rumors include websites, post-bars, BBS, Weibo, blogs, WeChat, instant messaging, and e-mail in diversified forms ranging from text to picture, sound, and video. Concerning the 50 Internet health rumors, they are from websites and social media, and the content are shown by texts, pictures, and short videos. It is more difficult to prevent Internet health rumors from spreading in multiple forms and via multiple media channels. Moreover, the evolution of media has not only affected the way of information transmission between people but also have brought a new impact on the “special information”, rumors.
“To Whom” indicates the diversification of receivers. The elderly, children, and women are the receivers accurately targeted by Internet health rumors. The Analysis Report of Population Vulnerable to Rumors released by Tencent Company in 2017 also shows that the elderly are most vulnerable to the spread of Internet rumors, and health rumors account for the highest proportion of rumors spread among the elderly (The report is released by Tencent Truth Platform in 2017). In addition, mutual confirmation between receivers is another factor that promotes the extensive spread of rumors. Apart from arousing the attention of receivers, Internet health rumors also have to make themselves convincing among the targeted receivers to achieve the purpose of communication. As pointed out by Kapferer, there are three conditions for rumors to be convincing: a) the source of information is reliable, b) the information should be what people expect and want to know, and c) the information should sound real [28]. The Category Concepts such as “faking real information”, “fuzzy truth”, “claiming as reliable information”, and “meeting the psychology of the public” in the coded materials exactly reveal the above viewpoints.
“With What Effect” is the effect or result of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. A specific scenario is that the receiver reads (or does not read), believes (or does not believe), and spreads (or does not spread) the Internet health rumors. Based on the result of this study, Core Concepts are abstracted, namely, Correlation, Credibility, and Communication. Whether people read, believe, and spread an Internet health rumor is based on the three Core Concepts. These three Core Concepts constitute an internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism for the generation and communication of Internet health rumors, which explains the generation and communication of Internet health rumors.
Therefore, Rumor Mongers, Rumor Refuters, Internet Health Rumors, Rumor-Dispelling Information, Hot Events, Media Channels, Receivers, and Effect constitute the eight elements throughout the generation and communication of Internet health rumors as shown in Table 5. Among them, rumor refuters, rumor-dispelling information, and hot events are three new elements added based on the 5W communication model; “Who”, ”What” “In Which Channel”, “To Whom” and “With What Effect” have also been given new meanings in the context of the Internet environment.

4.3. Relationships among Eight-Element Communication Model

Coupling refers to the phenomenon that two or more systems or two forms of motion influence each other and even unite through interaction [29]. The key to coupling is to break the boundaries of the original system and recombine the related elements according to the natural association of the elements and the free flow of information and form a “living” subject system with self-organizing structure and dynamic elements in the system [30]. Based on the 5W communication model, we proposed the eight elements of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. The coupling of Internet health rumors refers to the interaction and unification of rumor mongers, rumor refuters, rumor information, rumor-dispelling information, hot events, media channels, receivers, and effects through various ways and forms during the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. From different perspectives, the eight elements of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors have different combination forms to explain the process and mechanism of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors. The relationships are shown in Figure 4.
From the perspective of the system boundary, the eight-element communication model includes internal and external coupling. The internal coupling refers to the internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism mentioned above among the three elements, namely correlation, reliability, and communication. Internet health rumors are “time bombs”. Once rumors are contacted by the receivers, the internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism of Internet health rumors starts to work, and the receivers make the following choices: (a) unrelated → filter, (b) related → unreliable → filter → rumors memo, (c) related → reliable → not to spread → filter → rumors memo, and (d) related → reliable → spread → related. External coupling refers to how the seven elements interact with each other and with an internal mutual dynamic assistance mechanism. Whether people read (or do not read), believe (or do not believe), and spread (or do not spread) is determined by correlation, credibility, and communication, respectively. Therefore, the eight-element communication model is illustrated as follows: (a) rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → not to read, (b) rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → read → not to believe ← rumor-dispelling information ← rumor refuters, (c) rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → read → believe → not to spread ← rumor-dispelling information ← rumor refuters, and (d) rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → read → believe → spread ← rumor-dispelling information ← rumor refuters. The relationships are shown in Figure 4.
From the perspective of the development process, the eight-element coupling model includes the prelude to coupling, the occurrence of coupling, and removing coupling. Prelude to coupling refers to the stage in which the Internet health rumors made up by rumor mongers have not reached the receivers, that is, rumor mongers → Internet health rumors. At this stage, there is no coupling effect among the eight elements. The coupling effect is imminent because they aim at specific populations such as kids, women, or elders. Once rumors reach the receivers, the coupling effect occurs. The occurrence of coupling is the stage in which the Internet health rumors made up by rumor mongers have reached the receivers and produced certain effects, that is, rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → effect. The coupling effect is manifested as reading, believing, and spreading. According to the influence of the coupling effect, rumor refuters fight against rumor mongers and Internet health rumors by releasing them at different degrees. Removing coupling refers to the rumor-dispelling information. From the perspective of development, the three stages of the eight-element coupling model can be summarized and simplified as rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → effect ← rumor-dispelling information ← rumor refuters (Figure 4).
From the perspective of the number of elements, the eight-element coupling model includes weak coupling, regular coupling, and strong coupling. Weak coupling refers to the coupling phenomenon with incomplete main elements (rumor mongers, receivers, and rumor refuters) and the incomplete relationship between elements without intervention elements (hot events and media channels), e.g., rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → effect. Regular coupling refers to the coupling phenomenon with complete main elements (rumor mongers, receivers, and rumor refuters) and complete relationship between elements but without intervention elements (hot events and media channels), e.g., rumor mongers → Internet health rumors → receivers → effect ← rumor-dispelling information ← rumor refuters. Strong coupling refers to the coupling phenomenon with complete main elements (rumor mongers, receivers, and rumor refuters), the complete relationship between elements, and intervention elements (hot events and media channels), as shown in Figure 4.
In summary, the relationships among this eight-element communication model from three perspectives are illustrated. Based on this, the research team proposed the idea that the approach to the governance of Internet health rumors is to break the relationship among the eight elements.

5. Strategies for Governing Internet Health Rumors

5.1. From the Perspective of Rumor Mongers and the Channels: Controlling the Publishing and Spreading of Internet Health Rumors

Information source determines the origin of rumors, and also becomes a key factor in evaluating the credibility of Internet health rumors, which has a significant impact on the popularity and duration of Internet rumors of public events. The professionalism of the rumor monger and the authority of the platform for Internet health rumors directly affect whether the Internet health rumors would be read, believed, and spread. Therefore, only by tracking the information source and taking targeted measures can the Internet health rumors be effectively eliminated or reduced. At the same time, the government should pay close attention to hot issues in the health field to avoid or reduce the generating and spreading of health rumors on the Internet. For example, new Internet health rumors have surged since 2020, such as COVID-19, related medicine, and related vaccine. Regarding channels for communication of Internet health rumors, news media, social media, and other platforms should be hold accountable if they have no policy or actions for controlling Internet health rumors. The spread of some Internet health rumors could be cut off by those channels. The government should strictly monitor and control the channels and media for releasing and disseminating Internet health information, establish a regular governance mechanism, and conduct emergency management for the possible wrong and misleading public Internet health information.

5.2. From the Perspective of Rumor Refuter: Improving the Governance Ability of Internet Health Rumors

The government often plays the key role of “rumor refuter” in rumor control, and the credibility of the government is the key to effectively dispel rumors. If the government’s credibility is vulnerable, it may fall into the “Tacitus trap” (Tacitus trap: a political theory named after Roman historian Tacitus, which describes a situation where an unpopular government is hated no matter what it does and whether it is right or wrong), in the process of releasing refuting rumors on the Internet. In the field of health information communication, the credibility of the government is mainly reflected in the timeliness and transparency of Internet health information. In order to avoid falling into the “Tacitus trap”, the government should actively build professional Internet-health-rumor-refuting think tanks and platforms to timely and effectively popularize correct health information. It is essential to take advice from professional scientific research institutions and acquire assistance from news media, so that the Internet health information would be professional, authoritative, and timely. Only a combination of multiple ways can prevent the growth and spread of Internet health rumors to the greatest extent.

5.3. From the Perspective of Receiver: Improving Literacy of Health Information of the Public

Improving literacy of health information of the public can enhance their immunity to Internet health rumors, so that it would fundamentally reduce the credibility and block dissemination of Internet health rumors.
Especially, it is necessary to enhance the scientific communication for vulnerable groups, such as children, women, and the elderly. Additionally, scientific communication should specifically aim at the key health issues, that is, food safety, environment issues, and diseases.
In addition, “minority” opinions of Internet health information communication should also be taken into account. The spiral theory of silence holds that when people’s opinions belong to “minority” opinions in the public opinion, they tend to keep silent to avoid isolation. In the field of health information communication, opinions of “minorities”, especially those of professionals, cannot be ignored. How to make professional Internet health information become “dominant opinions” is also a problem worth further consideration.

6. Conclusions

By analyzing 50 text materials of Internet health rumors based on grounded theory, three Core Concepts are abstracted, that is, Correlation, Credibility, and Communication. The internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism among these three concepts is illustrated. Based on the feature, changes, and trends of the Internet, Lasswell’s 5W communication model needs to be reexamined and expanded. Thus, five elements are expanded to eight elements, namely, rumor mongers, rumor refuters, Internet health rumors, rumor-dispelling information, hot events, media channels, receivers, and effect. The eight elements are combined in different forms. The eight-element communication model is viewed from three perspectives. The relationships among eight elements are explained and illustrated to reveal the complicated process and internal mechanism of the generation and communication of Internet health rumors.
Compared with the linear mechanism of the 5W communication model, this model develops the process of generation and communication of Internet health rumors. In addition, it is the application of the 5W communication model at the micro level. The significance of this study is that cutting off the chain among these eight elements may eliminate or weaken the harm and impact of Internet health rumors. Thus, it provides the practical reference value for the government to control Internet health rumors. This article also proposes three strategies for governing Internet health rumors from three perspectives, that is, rumor mongers and the channels, rumor refuters, and rumor receivers. By governing the Internet health rumors from multiple ways, Internet health rumors could be reduced or blocked timely and effectively in the future.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, H.W. and Z.L.; methodology, H.W.; software, H.W.; validation, J.C. and Z.L.; formal analysis, H.W.; investigation, J.C.; resources, H.W.; writing—original draft preparation, H.W.; writing—review and editing, Z.L.; supervision, X.G.; project administration, X.G.; funding acquisition, Z.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by “The Research of Hospice Care law in China under the perspective of ‘Healthy China Strategy’”, the funder is Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, grant number 2020BS001; “The Research on integrated traditional Chinese and western medicine medical emergency treatment system in response to pandemic from the perspective of collaborative governance”, grant number 20FGL004.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Information of 50 Internet health rumors.
Table A1. Information of 50 Internet health rumors.
No.YearRumorThe Title of NewsPlatformWebsite Address
12014The radiation of Wi-Fi would influence the health of the human body (based on a fabricated experiment)the Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technology (a big national association for researchers, which is financially supported by the Chinese government. It has branches in almost every province and big city in China. One of its goals is for science communication)https://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
22014It would take 32 days to detoxify after eating a bowl of instant noodlesthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
32014There are 6 hazards for the radiation from geothermal heating the Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
42014Children would not grow after taking antibiotics once every 7 daysthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
52014French scientists have proved that transgenic corn would produce cancerthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
62014People who are infected with Ebola virus would become zombies the Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
72014Bottled water is poisonous after it is heated by sunthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2014China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://baike.baidu.com/reference/16532553/4de4MAgwjp6_027xghfhwmNkWpn6kMaMDm1MZtEjO6HnTr2Rbn77tzXYVjbRzwHrJCtp7QYPhBfyVDFGHox-vJfXYk3nG-gbLnjp6xA3 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
82019The radiation of high-speed railways would cause infertility of unmarried womenthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2019China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://m.thepaper.cn/baijiahao_5386755 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
92019Eyeball exercises would cure shortsightednessthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2019China Association for Science and Technologyhttps://m.thepaper.cn/baijiahao_5386755 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
102015Eating pork blood, duck blood, and other animal blood can eliminate hazethe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChat (the most widely used social media in China)http://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
112015Milk products for children contain specific kind of bacteria, which could cause leukemiathe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
122015Drinking the juice of wheat seedling would cure cancerthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
132015Crayfish is used to process corpsesthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
142015Using water which contains chlorine for cooking can lead to cancerthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
152015Water used for steaming food actually contains nitrite, which could produce cancerthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
162015Using vegetable oil for cooking would produce cancerthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
172015There are 6 hazards for the radiation of Wi-Fi the Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
182015Radiation from geothermal heating would kill your children slowlythe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2015WeChathttp://health.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0106/c21471-28020014.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
192016A table showing that some specific kind of food could not be eaten togetherthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2016WeChathttp://www.chinatt315.org.cn/xfjs/2017-1/6/152242.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
202017Nori and rice are made of plasticthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2017WeChathttps://tech.qq.com/a/20180117/034052.htm (accessed on 26 October 2022)
212017Some Chinese medicine or prescription could improve blood flowthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2017WeChathttps://tech.qq.com/a/20180117/034052.htm (accessed on 26 October 2022)
222018Drinking hot lemon water can cure cancerthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2018WeChathttps://www.sohu.com/a/285836139_120046571 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
232019Salt which contains less sodium would lead to deaththe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2019WeChathttps://news.mydrivers.com/1/664/664851.htm (accessed on 26 October 2022)
242019Pork sold in the market has hookworm in several provincesthe Top 10 Rumors on WeChat of 2019WeChathttps://news.mydrivers.com/1/664/664851.htm (accessed on 26 October 2022)
252016Drug-resistant bacteria is found in the haze in Beijingthe Top 10 Rumors for Haze of 2016Ministry of Environment protection of China https://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
262016The heavy haze in North China is caused by nuclear pollutionthe Top 10 Rumors for Haze of 2016Ministry of Environment protection of China https://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
272016The particles of haze would influence the health of alveoli in human bodythe Top 10 Rumors for Haze of 2016Ministry of Environment protection of China https://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
282016Survival rate of patients who accept chemotherapy is only 2.3%the Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing News (a widely used news media in China)https://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
292016People who have no children would be seemed as the disabledthe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
3020162.1 million children die from luxurious decoration every yearthe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
312016Statins (a kind of medicine) may accelerate the aging processthe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
322016The pathogens caused by haze mainly aim at children under 12 years oldthe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
332016Washing hair first when taking showers could cause diseasethe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
342016Transgenic mosquitoes are main cause of the outbreak of Zika virus the Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
352016Using pencil for a long time would cause lead poisoningthe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2016Beijing Newshttps://www.bjnews.com.cn/health/2017/01/03/429287.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
362017Dipping water on toothbrush before brushing teeth is necessarythe Top 10 Rumors for Health of 2017Sina website (a widely used news media in China. It covers almost every aspect of news including health areas)http://health.sina.com.cn/hc/2018-03-07/doc-ifxipenn6660392.shtml (accessed on 26 October 2022)
372017Enzymes (a kind of product) could beautify the skinthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2017Sina websitehttp://health.sina.com.cn/hc/2018-03-07/doc-ifxipenn6660392.shtml (accessed on 26 October 2022)
382017Eating durian and milk together can lead to food poisoningthe Top 10 Rumors for Food Safety of 2017Sina websitehttp://health.sina.com.cn/hc/2018-03-07/doc-ifxipenn6660392.shtml (accessed on 26 October 2022)
392017Gene detection could predict the talent of childrenthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2017Sina websitehttp://health.sina.com.cn/hc/2018-03-07/doc-ifxipenn6660392.shtml (accessed on 26 October 2022)
402017Dandelion can cure cancerthe Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of 2017Sina websitehttp://health.sina.com.cn/hc/2018-03-07/doc-ifxipenn6660392.shtml (accessed on 26 October 2022)
412018Shopping receipts contain bisphenol A which can cause cancerthe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2018China Science Communication (China Science Communication. It is a platform specifically for science communication)http://kpzg.people.com.cn/n1/2019/0116/c404214-30551221.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
422018People have two constitutions, acid or alkalinethe Top 10 Rumors for Science of 2018China Science Communicationhttp://kpzg.people.com.cn/n1/2019/0116/c404214-30551221.html (accessed on 26 October 2022)
432018USA Food and Drug Administration has approved a broad-spectrum antibiotic, which has 75% cure ratethe Top 10 Rumor of 2018Guokr websitehttps://www.bilibili.com/read/cv1769532 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
442018University of Hong Kong invented a new drug which can cure cancerthe Top 10 Rumors of 2018Guokr website (a widely used website specifically for science education)https://www.bilibili.com/read/cv1769532 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
452018Frying Garlic would produce the substance which could cause cancerthe Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of 2018Toutiao website (a widely used news media in China)https://www.sohu.com/a/286786229_120050866 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
462018Coffee from Starbucks could cause cancerthe Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of 2018Toutiao websitehttps://www.sohu.com/a/286786229_120050866 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
472018According to WHO, white rice is junk food the Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of Second Quarter of 2018Toutiao websitehttps://www.sohu.com/a/240018276_331220 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
482018Cucumber contains a lot of wormsthe Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of Second Quarter of 2018Toutiao websitehttps://www.sohu.com/a/240018276_331220 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
492018Eggs which have speckles could lead to food poisoningthe Top 10 Rumors for Healthcare of Second Quarter of 2018Toutiao websitehttps://www.sohu.com/a/240018276_331220 (accessed on 26 October 2022)
502019Drinking the tea made by Ginkgo leaf could decrease blood pressurethe Top 3 Rumors for Healthcare of 2019Shanghai Rumor-Refuting Platform (a platform for refuting rumors in Shanghai)http://piyao.jfdaily.com:1801/py_4vMWkj9Fy8LJp8MpVOEV/rYZvFcdECbhrPRMUuRm/t6ViQR402s+94+8DZfygLrK9jkaAigp/GLs2ECG9wcD (accessed on 26 October 2022)

References

  1. Knapp, R.H. A Psychology of Rumor. Public Opin. Q. 1944, 8, 22–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  2. Allport, G.; Postman, L. The Psychology of Rumor; Henry Holt: New York, NY, USA, 1947. [Google Scholar]
  3. Chorus, A. The basic Law of Rumor. J. Abnorm. Soc. Psychol. 1953, 48, 313–314. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Vosoughi, S.; Roy, D.; Aral, S. The spread of true and false news online. Science 2018, 359, 1146–1151. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  5. Sharma, M.; Yadav, K.; Yadav, N.; Ferdinand, C. Zika virus pandemic—Analysis of Facebook as a social media health information platform. Am. J. Infect. Control 2017, 45, 301–302. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  6. Ozturk, P.; Li, H.; Sakamoto, Y. Combating rumor spread on Social Media: The effectiveness of refutation and warning. In Proceedings of the 2015 48th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Kauai, HI, USA, 5–8 January 2015. [Google Scholar]
  7. Vraga, E.K.; Bode, L. Using Expert Sources to Correct Health Misinformation in Social Media. Sci. Commun. 2017, 39, 637. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Lasswell, H.D. The Structure and Function of Communication in Society. In The Communication of Ideas; The Institute for Religious and Social Studies: New York, NY, USA, 1948. [Google Scholar]
  9. Shoemaker, P.; Tankard, J.; Lasorsa, D. How to Build Social Science Theories; Sage Publications: London, UK, 2004; p. 109. [Google Scholar]
  10. Biagi, S. Media Impact: An Introduction to Mass Media, 10th ed.; Wadsworth: Stamford, CT, USA, 2013. [Google Scholar]
  11. Mcquail, D. Sociology of mass communication. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 1985, 11, 93–111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Liu, H. A controversial text of communication study. Chin. J. Journal. Commun. 2009, 2, 9–14. [Google Scholar]
  13. Peng, W. Analysis of New Media Communication Based on Lasswell’s “5W” Model. J. Educ. Soc. Res. 2015, 5, 245. [Google Scholar]
  14. Sapienza, Z.; Iyer, N.; Veenstra, A. Reading Lasswell’s Model of Communication Backward: Three Scholarly Misconceptions. Mass Commun. Soc. 2015, 18, 599–622. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Fei, F. Resourcing Change: A Grounded Theory Explaining the Process by Which Managers Address Challenges in Their Initiation of Change as Learning at Work. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Bath, Bath, UK, 1 December 2007. [Google Scholar]
  16. Glaser, B.G. Theoretical Sensitivity: Advances in the Methodology of Grounded Theory; Sociology Press: Mill Valley, CA, USA, 1978. [Google Scholar]
  17. Bordia, P.; Difonzo, N. Psychological motivations in rumor spread. In Rumor Mills; Fine, G., Campion-Vincent, V., Heath, C., Eds.; Routledge: New York, NY, USA, 2005; pp. 87–101. [Google Scholar]
  18. Reumaux, F. Black Widow: The Indication and Spread of Rumors; The Commercial Press: Beijing, China, 1999; pp. 12–13. [Google Scholar]
  19. Sun, L. Online talks of “WeChat” and reconstructing of publicness of Chinese acquaintance Circle in electronic writing. Chin. J. Journal. Commun. 2014, 36, 6–20. [Google Scholar]
  20. Shin, D.-H.; Lee, S.; Hwang, Y. How do credibility and utility play in the user experience of health informatics services? Comput. Hum. Behav. 2017, 67, 292–302. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Metzger, M.; Flanagin, A.; Medders, R. Social and heuristic approaches to credibility evaluation online. J. Commun. 2010, 60, 413–439. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  22. Noelle-Neumann, E. The Spiral of Silence: Public Opinion—Our Social Skin, 2nd ed.; the University of Chicago Press: Chicago, IL, USA, 1993; pp. 1–7. [Google Scholar]
  23. Rosnow, R.L. Inside rumor: A personal journey. Am. Psychol. 1991, 46, 484–496. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Allport, W.; Postman, L. Psychology of Rumor; Liaoning Education Press: Shenyang, China, 2003; p. 20. [Google Scholar]
  25. Reumaux, F. Black Widow: The Sign and Spread of Rumors; The Commercial Press: Beijing, China, 1999; pp. 12–13. [Google Scholar]
  26. Chai, Y. The Harm of Internet Rumor to Social Stability and Its Governance; People’s Tribune: Bowling Green, MO, USA, 2013; Volume 20, pp. 20–23. [Google Scholar]
  27. Ji, H.; Su, B.; Lv, M. Intention of Internet rumor information emotional spreading behavior: A study based on hot-events. Mag. Inf. 2014, 33, 34–39. [Google Scholar]
  28. Kapferer, J.N. Rumor; Shanghai People’s Press: Shanghai, China, 1991; pp. 71–89. [Google Scholar]
  29. Zhang, Y.B. Study on the Coupling of Ownership Structure and Industrial Structure in China; People’s Publishing House: Beijing, China, 2001; p. 77. [Google Scholar]
  30. Du, Z.; Mu, D. Study on Supply Chain System Based on Function Coupling Synergy; Jilin People’s Press: Changchun, China, 2005; pp. 115–118. [Google Scholar]
Figure 1. Number of rumors based on groups of people and encoded frequency based on fields of Internet health rumor.
Figure 1. Number of rumors based on groups of people and encoded frequency based on fields of Internet health rumor.
Healthcare 10 02507 g001
Figure 2. Internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism (relationship among Correlation, Credibility, and Communication).
Figure 2. Internal dynamic mutual assistance mechanism (relationship among Correlation, Credibility, and Communication).
Healthcare 10 02507 g002
Figure 3. “5W” communication model that was proposed by Harold Lasswell.
Figure 3. “5W” communication model that was proposed by Harold Lasswell.
Healthcare 10 02507 g003
Figure 4. Relationship among eight-element communication model. Rumor memo: meaning the receiver knows that this health information is a rumor, marks it as “rumor”, and would not believe and spread it.
Figure 4. Relationship among eight-element communication model. Rumor memo: meaning the receiver knows that this health information is a rumor, marks it as “rumor”, and would not believe and spread it.
Healthcare 10 02507 g004
Table 1. The results of open coding.
Table 1. The results of open coding.
NumberPrimary ConceptTextFrequencyExamples of Reference Points
A1Bluff42171Eyeball exercises can reduce shortsightedness from 500 degrees to 100 degrees.
A2Twisting the truth41136A packet of instant noodles contains 25 kinds of food additives, and it takes 32 days to detoxify after eating a bowl of instant noodles.
A3Being close to life37116Heavy haze would do harm to lungs of people. Eating blood of pig, blood of duck, and other animal blood can clean the lung.
A4Fear of cancer1874Radiation from geothermal heating can produce cancer.
A5Life reminder2472The editor learned that the steamer is so poisonous, so do not steam food by using cold water at home.
A6Food safety1765There are a lot of Toxoplasma gondii in cucumber. It can only be cured by eating selenium. (This rumor actually is for selling healthcare products containing selenium.)
A7Cognitive contrast2159Compared with patients who refuse chemotherapy, patients who accept chemotherapy would die faster.
A8Established fact2358Garlic would produce acrylamide when it is fried at high temperature. Acrylamide is a class of 2A carcinogen that is harmful to human body.
A9Authority of experts2357Chinese experts warn that geothermal heating radiation may cause intellectual disability or amnesia among children.
A10Pretending to be surprised2052Wi-Fi! The killer hiding in your bedroom at night!
A11Authority of agencies2551According to the definition of junk food of the World Health Organization, white rice is junk food!
A12Creating suspense1648Why can’t China improve the radiation protection level of car body like Japan?
A13Children’s health1345Geothermal heating is slowly killing your children while bringing you warmth.
A14Research data1744Research from Spain: 90% of shopping receipts contain bisphenol A, which can produce cancer.
A15Eye-catching headline3637Children would not grow after taking antibiotics once every 7 days! Parents, please watch them carefully for your children!
A16Inducing curiosity1536Is there nuclear haze in China? Why is this concept blocked on the Internet? What happened?
A17Environmental
Issue
832Drug-resistant bacterium, “the last antibiotic of mankind”, is found in the haze in Beijing, and we could do nothing with it.
A18Creating panic1332Haze is a first-class carcinogen! It would block 30 million alveoli in your body a year! It would block a third of alveoli for three years!
A19Literary rhetoric1431Vegetable oil can produce fatty acids which can harm human body, just like effects that climate change threatens the earth.
A20Marketing strategy829Cancer patients are cured miraculously after drinking juice of wheat seedling.
A21Fabricated research1227After 12 days of experiment, the seeds germinated and thrived in the room without router, while most of the seeds of cress and pea died in the room with router!
A22Chronic diseases924The ancient prescription of dredging blood vessels would work no matter how serious it is!
A23Media reports1219Foreign media reported that Ebola virus evolved into zombie virus.
A24Fabricating the case for a specific person916John Di Carlo, a 72-year-old man, suffered from leukemia. He used dandelion to make tea and drink it every day. Only four months later, his condition began to improve.
A25Women’s health1015The radiation of high-speed railways is heavy. It would do harm to unmarried women. So unmarried women do not take them frequently! (Author: this rumor means that the radiation of high-speed railway may cause infertility of unmarried women.)
A26Traditional medicine515Dandelion root can kill 98% cancer cells in 48 h!
A27Moral kidnapping1013Let’s retweet, my friend! For yourself, for your family, and for your friends!
A28Professional nouns312Salmonella, which can cause food poisoning, has been detected in the eggs that have speckles.
A29Political smear312Many countries, such as France, Germany, and Japan have developed the technology of reducing radiation. The railway research institution of China also develops this technology, but the Ministry of Railways has no plans to use it.
A30Authoritative journal811Environmental Research Journal shows that 90% of receipts use thermal paper containing bisphenol A(BPA), which can lead to hormone-dependent cancer.
A31Skin beauty39The secret of the three effects of enzyme beauty, which makes you 10 years younger!
A32The health of the elderly 89The old lady’s cancer was cured by drinking wheat seedling juice.
A33Inside information69Warm reminder from the hospital: The pathogens caused by haze mainly aim at children under 12 years old.
A34False science communication58The persistent haze in North China belongs to nuclear smog.
A36Taking advantage of celebrity57In the speech, Zhong Nanshan (a famous expert in the area of contagion) quoted the relevant statistics of China Environmental Protection Association: For the children with leukemia, 90% of them have had luxurious decoration in their homes. About 2.1 million children die from luxurious decoration every year.
A37Fawning on foreigners27Crayfish is a kind of insect that is used to process corpses, and foreigners never eat this food.
A38Fear of AIDS17Hong Kong University’s new drug to eliminate AIDS is simply too powerful.
A39Traditional culture26Look at the word “rice”. “Food + anti = rice” (in the context of Chinese Character) means the sequence of eating is wrong!
A40Spread of the virus15Transgenic mosquitoes may be the chief cause of the outbreak of Zika virus.
A41Oral health15It is the correct brushing posture to brush toothpaste directly without touching water.
A42Historical event35Japanese biochemical troops used crayfish to dispose of a large number of corpses.
A43Video commentary45The photographer said: “This is Toxoplasma gondii (a kind of parasite). It can’t be killed even when the temperature is at 260 °C. It must be cured with selenium.”
A44Drug safety24Red alert: Statins may accelerate the aging process.
A45Men’s health44Geothermal heating affects the human reproductive system, which is mainly manifested by the decrease of male sperm quality.
A46Mental health33Stan said: “If you eat too much corn oil or sunflower oil, the lack of Omega-3 may lead to mental health or aphasia.”
A47Policy suggestion33China should formulate a unified national standard for safety of geothermal heating radiation as soon as possible.
A48False theory23Cut 2–3 slices of lemon and put it in the hot water, which will turn into alkaline water. It is good to drink it every day.
A49Educational video33The video shows that the workers put the plastic into the machine and the machine produces the white particles. The worker also put these white particles into a woven bag originally used for containing rice. (This rumor let people believe that the white particles are the white rice and they would be sold on the market)
A50Occupational health121 million lives have gone per year because of safety accidents of the coal industry in China
A51Place of incident22Hookworm has appeared in pork in Zhejiang province, Guangdong province, Hunan province, and other places. The sick pork comes from Guangxi province.
A52Mathematical formula12Shrimp + vitamin C = food poisoning
A53Rumor’s derivatives12See the article “See how western doctors ‘starve’ cancer cells and cure their cancer”.
A54The health of the disabled 11People who do not have a sexual partner or have no children can be classified as disabled.
A55Pretended questioning11A user majoring in chemistry also questioned that the heat resistance of polyester material used to make beverage bottles is 70 °C, but “the temperature in cars cannot reach 70 °C”!
Table 2. Primary Concept and Category Concept.
Table 2. Primary Concept and Category Concept.
No.Category ConceptPrimary
Concept
FrequencyConnotation
1Attracting the attention of the publicEye-catching headline424“Attracting public attention” plays a critical role in promoting the generation and communication of Internet health rumors, with the eight primary concepts, e.g., “eye-catching headline” and “pretending to be surprised”, being the important means of “attracting public attention”.
Pretending to be surprised
Media reports
Taking advantage of celebrity
Cognitive contrast
Literary rhetoric
Bluff
Creating suspense
2Faking real informationTraditional culture286With real information in ten aspects mixed with fake information, the public finds it difficult to distinguish the genuine from fake. There is a process relationship between “faking real information” and “attracting public attention”; that is, Internet health rumors generally attract public attention first, which then makes it hard for the public to distinguish the faked real information, thereby interfering with the cognition and judgment of the public.
Traditional medicine
Established fact
Research data
Fabricated research
Historical event
Authority of agencies
Authoritative journal
Authority of experts
Professional nouns
3Fuzzy truthBeing close to life264The fuzzy truth in the field of Internet health rumors has the following features: being close to life, twisting the truth, false science communication, false theory, and pretending to raise questions. As a result, the public is unable to clearly recognize the truth about health and will be constantly trapped by the “cage” of Internet health rumors.
Twisting the truth
False science communication
False theory
Pretending to raise questions
4Meeting psychology of the publicFear of cancer240Internet health rumors meet the multiple psychological needs of the public. Fear of cancer and fear of AIDS reveal the public’s psychology of avoiding diseases; life reminder reflects the altruistic psychology; political smear and fawning on foreigners meet the psychology of harm the society (rumors could be taken advantage by people who have malicious intentions).
Inducing curiosity
Fear of AIDS
Creating panic
Life reminder
Political smear
Fawning on foreigners
5Covering different areas of the health issuesSpread of the virus147The need of health information is a significant factor leading to Internet health rumors. Based on the collected materials, Internet health rumors cover eight domains such as spread of the virus, environmental issue, chronic diseases, food safety and drug safety. Therefore, there is nowhere for the public to hide from Internet health rumors while satisfying their needs of obtaining health information.
Environmental issue
Oral health
Chronic diseases
Skin beauty
Mental health
Drug safety
Food safety
6Focusing on the health of different groups of people Children’s health76Focusing on the health of different groups of people promotes the public to rapidly propagate Internet health rumors. The children’s health, women’s health, the health of the elderly, men’s health, occupational health, and the health of the disabled involved in this category have covered almost all groups of people. It strengthens the correlation between receivers and Internet health rumors, which leads the public to actively propagate the rumors by connecting the false information with people around them.
Women’s health
The Health of the elderly
Men’s health
Occupational health
The Health of the disabled
7Inducing secondary transmissionMoral kidnapping49Intimidating and seducing the receivers to carry on the secondary dissemination passively is the remedy in the case of ineffective active spread of Internet health rumors. Due to moral kidnapping, the receivers have no choice but to spread the rumors. Slogans such as “retweet, bro” in marketing strategy and video commentary are very incendiary. Rumor’s derivatives refer to the mutual assistance between two or more rumors in spreading.
Video commentary
Rumor’s derivatives
Marketing strategy
8Fictitious informationFabricating the case for a specific person21Those who spread Internet health rumors are good at making up relevant information. Changing the case for a specific person or place of the incident related to health information can often bring Internet health rumors back to life. Policy suggestion makes rumors forward-looking, making it impossible for the receivers to judge whether they are true or false.
Place of the incident
Policy suggestion
9Claiming as reliable information Inside information14Internet health rumors often claim to be reliable. To prove themselves reliable, Internet health rumors often resort to inside information, mathematical formulas, and educational videos.
Mathematical formula
Educational video
Table 3. Category Concept and Core Concept.
Table 3. Category Concept and Core Concept.
Core ConceptCategory Concept
CorrelationFictitious information
Focusing on the health of different groups of people
Covering different areas of the health issues
CredibilityClaiming as reliable information
Faking real information
Fuzzy truth
CommunicationInducing secondary transmission
Meeting psychology of the public
Attracting the attention of the public
Table 4. Interaction of correlation, credibility, and communication based on 50 Internet health rumors.
Table 4. Interaction of correlation, credibility, and communication based on 50 Internet health rumors.
Communication
Meeting Psychology of the PublicInducing Secondary Transmission Attracting the Attention of the Public
CorrelationFictitious information638
Focusing on the health of different groups of people16517
Covering different areas of the health issues251030
CredibilityClaiming as reliable information000
Fuzzy truth351143
Faking real information26732
Table 5. Eight-element communication model for Internet health rumors.
Table 5. Eight-element communication model for Internet health rumors.
WhoWhatIn Which ChannelTo WhomWith What Effect
1 Rumor mongers (communicators)3 Internet health rumors5 Hot events—Including various health issues, such as environment, psychology, disease, drug, and food.6 Media Channel—
Website, post bar, BBS, Weibo, blog, WeChat, instant messaging, e-mail etc.
7 Receivers—All groups of people, e.g., the elderly, children, women, and men.8 Effect—read (not read), believe (not believe), and spread (not spread).
2 Rumor refuters4 Rumor-dispelling information
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Wei, H.; Chen, J.; Gan, X.; Liang, Z. Eight-Element Communication Model for Internet Health Rumors: A New Exploration of Lasswell’s “5W Communication Model”. Healthcare 2022, 10, 2507. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122507

AMA Style

Wei H, Chen J, Gan X, Liang Z. Eight-Element Communication Model for Internet Health Rumors: A New Exploration of Lasswell’s “5W Communication Model”. Healthcare. 2022; 10(12):2507. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122507

Chicago/Turabian Style

Wei, Haibin, Jianyang Chen, Xinyan Gan, and Zhenyi Liang. 2022. "Eight-Element Communication Model for Internet Health Rumors: A New Exploration of Lasswell’s “5W Communication Model”" Healthcare 10, no. 12: 2507. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122507

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop