In this RISJ Factsheet we examine news avoidance during the coronavirus pandemic in the UK. This is the third in a series of ten factsheets based on an ongoing online panel survey of a representative sample of the UK population, fielded from 7 May to 13 May 2020. We find that: (i) there has been a significant increase in news avoidance, with 22% saying they often or always actively try to avoid the news (up from 15% in mid-April), (ii) women (26%) are more likely to avoid news than men (18%), compounding existing gender inequalities in news use, (iii) the vast majority of those who always or often avoid news (86%), say they are trying to avoid COVID-19 news at least some of the time, with most primarily worried about the effect it has on th...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between Covid-19 news consumptio...
During crises, journalists rely on emotional appeals to alert the public. This includes fear appeals...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between COVID-19 news consumptio...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine how people think about the coronavirus crisis and how different in...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people's attitudes towards how news organisations, government and ...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people’s attitudes towards how news organisations, governme...
This study investigates the degree of news avoidance during the first months of the Covid-19 pandemi...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people’s willingness to adopt preventive measures against c...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine changes in attitudes towards the coronavirus pandemic response in ...
This article examines how young people (18–24) in England who experience social inequality consumed ...
COJO for COVID Recovery is a UKRI/AHRC-funded rapid COVID-19 response research project that addresse...
Objectives: COVID-19-related news is important for adherence to public health measures. We examined ...
The corona virus pandemic sparked a renewed interest in news consumption patterns. When major crises...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine how people perceive the threat of COVID-19 to their health, their ...
Over half of our news use is comprised of habits: routine behavior that is firmly ingrained in peopl...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between Covid-19 news consumptio...
During crises, journalists rely on emotional appeals to alert the public. This includes fear appeals...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between COVID-19 news consumptio...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine how people think about the coronavirus crisis and how different in...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people's attitudes towards how news organisations, government and ...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people’s attitudes towards how news organisations, governme...
This study investigates the degree of news avoidance during the first months of the Covid-19 pandemi...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine people’s willingness to adopt preventive measures against c...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine changes in attitudes towards the coronavirus pandemic response in ...
This article examines how young people (18–24) in England who experience social inequality consumed ...
COJO for COVID Recovery is a UKRI/AHRC-funded rapid COVID-19 response research project that addresse...
Objectives: COVID-19-related news is important for adherence to public health measures. We examined ...
The corona virus pandemic sparked a renewed interest in news consumption patterns. When major crises...
In this RISJ Factsheet we examine how people perceive the threat of COVID-19 to their health, their ...
Over half of our news use is comprised of habits: routine behavior that is firmly ingrained in peopl...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between Covid-19 news consumptio...
During crises, journalists rely on emotional appeals to alert the public. This includes fear appeals...
Existing research has begun to document some of the troubling links between COVID-19 news consumptio...