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The mass public's science literacy and co-production during the COVID-19 pandemic: empirical evidence from 140 cities in China

Political Science

The mass public's science literacy and co-production during the COVID-19 pandemic: empirical evidence from 140 cities in China

H. Qin, Z. Xie, et al.

This study reveals a compelling connection between public science literacy and co-production efforts during the COVID-19 pandemic, showcasing that a mere 1% increase in science literacy can result in a remarkable 14.2% uplift in collaborative initiatives. Conducted by Haibo Qin, Zhongxuan Xie, Huping Shang, Yong Sun, Xiaohui Yang, and Mengming Li across 140 Chinese cities, the findings underscore the crucial role education and local government play in enhancing public health responses.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
How to prevent and resolve COVID-19 pandemic and similar public health crisis is a significant research topic. Although research on science literacy has been involved in dealing with public health crisis, there is a lack of empirical tests between the mass public's science literacy and co-production during COVID-19 pandemic. With the empirical evidence from 140 cities in China, the study finds that the public's science literacy significantly promotes co-production in the battle against pandemic. Specifically, for every 1% increase in the mass public's science literacy in the city, co-production increased by 14.2%. Meanwhile, regional education level and local government capacity can expand the positive role of the public's science literacy on co-production to fight against COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, the performance of the public's science literacy on co-production against pandemic shows heterogeneity at different stages of pandemic prevention, in different regions, and in cities of different scales. This study complemented the gaps in existing research on science literacy and co-production and empirically verified the potential positive role of the public's science literacy in pandemic prevention and control. Furthermore, it provided new ideas for improving the effectiveness of public co-production in public health crisis governance.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jun 26, 2024
Authors
Haibo Qin, Zhongxuan Xie, Huping Shang, Yong Sun, Xiaohui Yang, Mengming Li
Tags
public science literacy
co-production
COVID-19 pandemic
China
collaborative initiatives
regional education
government capacity
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