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Review, yearNo. of databases (names)No. of studies (study types)Study objective
Abbott et al., 2022 8 (PubMed®, Epistemonikos, Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane COVID-19 Study Register, Embase®, CINAHL, Web of Science and WHO databases)280 (systematic reviews, overviews and meta-analysis)To map the nature, scope and quality of evidence syntheses on COVID-19 and to explore the relationship between review quality and the extent of researcher, policy and media interest
Alvarez-Galvez et al., 2021 7 (Scopus, MEDLINE®, Embase®, CINAHL, Sociological Abstracts, Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews and grey literature )42 (quantitative and qualitative studies and mixed-methods studies)To identify the factors that make possible the spread of medical and health misinformation during outbreaks and to reveal the needs and future directions for the development of new protocols that might contribute to the assessment and control of information quality in future infodemics
Aruhomukama & Bulafu, 2021 2 (PubMed® and CINAHL)10 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To interrogate and integrate knowledge levels and media sources of information findings of the studies on knowledge, attitudes, perceptions and practices towards COVID-19 done in low- and middle-income countries in Africa
Bhatt et al., 2021 4 (MEDLINE®, Embase®, Cochrane Databases and Google)5 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To assess the current use of social media in clinical practice guidelines dissemination across different medical specialties
Eckert et al., 2018 8 (PubMed®, Web of Science, CINAHL, CINAHL Complete, Communication and Mass Media Complete, PsychInfo®, WHO databases and Google Scholar) along with social media companies' reports79 (quantitative and qualitative studies and case studies)To conduct a systematic review on the extant literature on social media use during all phases of a disaster cycle
Gabarron et al., 2021 5 (PubMed®, Scopus, Embase®, PsychInfo® and Google Scholar)22 (mixed-methods studies)To review misinformation related to COVID-19 on social media during the first phase of the pandemic and to discuss ways to counter misinformation
Gunasekeran et al., 2022 3 (PubMed®, including MEDLINE® and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Xplore)35 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To highlight a brief history of social media in health care and report its potential negative and positive public health impacts
Lieneck et al., 2022 2 (EBSCO host and PubMed®)25 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To identify common facilitators and barriers in the literature which influence the promotion of vaccination against COVID-19
Muhammed & Mathew, 2022 7 (Web of Science, ACM digital library, AIS electronic library, EBSCO host, ScienceDirect, Scopus and Springer link)28 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To identify relevant literature on the spread of misinformation
Patel et al., 2020 6 (all databases of Web of Science, PubMed®, ProQuest, Google News, Google and Google Scholar)35To canvas the ways disinformation about COVID-19 is being spread in Ukraine, so as to form a foundation for assessing how to mitigate the problem
Pian et al., 2021 12 (PubMed®, CINAHL Complete, PsychInfo®, Psych Articles, ScienceDirect, Wiley Online Library, Web of Science, EBSCO, Communication & Mass Media Complete Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts and Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection)251 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To synthesize the existing literature on the causes and impacts of the COVID-19 infodemic
Rocha et al., 2021 3 (MEDLINE®, Virtual Health Library and Scielo)14 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To evaluate the impact of social media on the dissemination of infodemic knowing and its impacts on health
Suarez-Lledo & Alvarez-Galvez, 2021 2 (MEDLINE® and PREMEDLINE)69 (policy briefs and technical reports)To identify the main health misinformation topics and their prevalence on different social media platforms, focusing on methodological quality and the diverse solutions that are being implemented to address this public health concern
Tang et al., 2018 5 (PubMed®, PsychInfo®, CINAHL Plus, ProQuest® and Communication Source)30 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To better understand the status of existing research on emerging infectious diseases communication on social media
Truong et al., 2022 4 (PsychInfo®, MEDLINE®, Global Health and Embase®)28 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To examine the factors that promote vaccine hesitancy or acceptance during pandemics, major epidemics and global outbreaks
Walter et al., 2021 7 (Communication Source, Education Resources Information Center, Journal Storage, MEDLINE®, ProQuest, PubMed® and Web of Science)24 (quantitative and qualitative studies)To evaluate the relative impact of social media interventions designed to correct health-related misinformation
Wang et al., 2019 5 (PubMed®, Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews, Web of Science, Scopus and Google Scholar)57 (mixed-methods studies)To uncover the current evidence and better understand the 47 mechanisms of misinformation spread
Adu et al., 2021 NANATo estimate COVID-19 vaccine uptake and hesitancy rates for before-and-after the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved by FDA
Dong et al., 2022 NANATo review and synthesize the findings from qualitative studies conducted in different countries on the emergence, spread and consequences of false and misleading information about the pandemic
Fazeli et al., 2021 NANAAwaiting classification (limited access to the full-text file)
Gentile et al., 2021 NANAAwaiting classification (limited access to the full-text file)
Goldsmith et al., 2022 NANATo determine the extent and nature of social media use in migrant and ethnic minority communities for COVID-19 information and implications for preventative health measures including vaccination intent and uptake
Hilberts et al., 2021 NANATo establish the risk of health misinformation in social media to public health
Karimi-Shahanjarin et al., 2021 NANATo identify what initiatives and policies have been suggested and implemented to respond to and alleviate the harm caused by misinformation and disinformation concerning COVID-19
McGowan & Ekeigwe, 2021 NANATo assess if exposure to misinformation or disinformation influence health information-seeking behaviours
Pauletto et al., 2021 NANATo evaluate what are pros and cons of using social media during the COVID-19 pandemic
Pimenta et al., 2020 NANATo gather evidence on the impact of information about COVID-19 on the mental health of the population
Prabhu & Nayak, 2021 NANATo appraise what are the effects of the COVID-19 media based infodemic on mental health of general public
Trushna et al., 2021 NANATo undertake a mixed-methods systematic review exploring COVID-19 stigmatization, in terms of differences in experience and/or perception of different population sub-groups exposed to COVID-19, its mediators including media communications, coping strategies adopted to deal with such stigmata and the consequences in terms of health effects and health-seeking behaviour of affected individuals
Vass et al., 2022 NANAAwaiting classification (limited access to the full-text file)
Zhai et al., 2021 NANATo provide an overview of the current state of research concerning individual-level psychological and behavioural response to COVID-19-related information from different sources, as well as presenting the challenges and future research directions

COVID-19: coronavirus disease 2019; FDA: Food and Drug Administration; NA: not applicable; WHO: World Health Organization.

a There was an inconsistency between the used databases provided in the study’s abstract and those presented in the methods section. We considered the databases shown in the methods section.

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Sustainable Development Efficiency of Cultural Landscape Heritage in Urban Fringe Based on GIS-DEA-MI, a Case Study of Wuhan, China

Affiliations.

  • 1 School of Civil Engineering, Architecture and Environment, Hubei University of Technology, Wuhan 430068, China.
  • 2 Innovation Demonstration Base of Ecological Environment Geotechnical and Ecological Restoration of Rivers and Lakes, Wuhan 430068, China.
  • 3 School of Architecture, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, China.
  • 4 Wuhan Planning and Design Institute, Wuhan 430014, China.
  • PMID: 36293641
  • PMCID: PMC9602819
  • DOI: 10.3390/ijerph192013061

Cultural landscape heritage refers to the rare and irreplaceable cultural landscapes recognized by UNESCO and the World Heritage Committee. It is recognized as a "common works of nature and human beings" of outstanding significance and universal value, and is a type of world heritage. Dueto construction, land isincreasingly limited in urban and rural areasin the process of urbanization, and cultural landscape heritage faces a huge threat, especially larger culturallandscapeheritagelocated at the edgesof cities. However, most of the existing studies have mainly focused on the material protection of heritage but have not paid enough attention to the non-material aspects of heritage sites, failing to reveal the inseparable nature of heritage and land. Therefore, this study takes sustainable development efficiency as its analysis tool, examines two pieces of cultural landscape heritage (the Panlongcheng site and the Tomb of the King of the Ming Dynasty) in the urban edge area of Wuhan, China as examples, innovates and establishes a multidimensional evaluation method based on the GIS-DEA-Ml model, and compares the dynamic changes of the spatial development efficiency and non-spatial development efficiency of the above two cultural landscape heritage cases. The results show that: both the spatial development efficiency and non-spatial development efficiency of Panlongcheng from 2010 to 2019 are significantly higher than that of the Tomb. This method makes up for the deficiency of traditional subjective qualitative analysis. It can be used to study the development efficiency of cultural landscape heritage more objectively and comprehensively, and promote the overall sustainable development of material and intangible cultural heritage. It can provide the basis for early decision-making and post-implementation evaluation for the preservation and utilization of cultural landscape heritage under the background of urban renewal.

Keywords: GIS-DEA-MI model; cultural landscape heritage; heritage preservation and utilization; sustainable development efficiency; urban fringe.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Knowledge mapping of the study…

Knowledge mapping of the study on the developmental efficiency of cultural landscape heritage.

Kernel density analysis of traffic…

Kernel density analysis of traffic facilities.

Kernel density analysis of communal…

Kernel density analysis of communal facilities.

Kernel density analysis of service…

Kernel density analysis of service facilities.

Analysis of road network.

Analysis of land use property.

Statistical graph of non-spatial development…

Statistical graph of non-spatial development efficiency.

Statistical graph of the degree…

Statistical graph of the degree of change in non-spatial development efficiency.

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  • 20YJC760145/Ministry of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences Youth Fund
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