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Mitigating the Infodemic Associated with the COVID-19 Pandemic: Roles of Nigerian Librarians
Author(s) -
Afebuameh James Aiyebelehin,
Faith O Mesagan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iafor journal of literature and librarianship
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.103
0
ISSN - 2187-0608
DOI - 10.22492/ijl.10.1.04
Subject(s) - distrust , pandemic , public relations , misinformation , political science , covid-19 , social media , population , service (business) , descriptive research , sociology , business , medicine , social science , marketing , environmental health , disease , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law
This study investigates how Nigerian librarians are mitigating the infodemic caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The descriptive survey design was adopted for the study. The entire population of Nigerian librarians in major social media platforms of the Nigerian Library Association and its sections were used for the study. An online survey administered through Google forms was used. A total of 186 librarians responded to the survey. The data was analysed with percentages and presented in charts. The findings show that: the majority (80%) agreed that there is infodemic in Nigeria. The major roles played by the librarians in mitigating the infodemic are: correction of misconceptions online (54.8%), posting of official information online(47.8%), and provision of authentic sources to COVID-19 guidelines (39.8%); the majority (91.1%) of the librarians played these roles as personal initiatives; majority (79%) of them believe their roles have been effective; and the major challenges facing their efforts are the issue of low bandwidth (59.1%), distrust for official information (31%) and regard for myths (29%). The implication of these findings is that most of the efforts made by Nigerian librarians to curb the spread of fake news associated with the corona virus were mainly personal initiatives. This further implies that a majority of Nigerian libraries do not have plans and policies in place to ensure service delivery in emergency situations. It was recommended, among others, that Nigerian librarians should go beyond online efforts to use traditional methods in order to reach a larger part of the populace without access to the internet.

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