Miami Herald

After a year of bad news about COVID-19, turns out we really didn’t want to hear any good news

- BY CYNTHIA M. ALLEN Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Back in September, I wrote about how, in the midst of the pandemic, there was a lot of good news that wasn’t getting much coverage. At the time, the positivity rate of COVID-19 tests and hospitaliz­ation rate were both in decline.

It was obvious to those who closely monitored the data, but news coverage didn’t reflect it. Instead, it largely focused on areas where caseloads were growing.

Promising new treatments, breakthrou­ghs in vaccine developmen­t and studies that showed viral spread in schools really wasn’t happening, all were jettisoned for the most apocalypti­c public-health prediction­s, many of which — to this day — have not come to fruition.

That column caused apoplexy for some readers, who told me that my sunniness was insensitiv­e or ignorant. But I knew from reading science journals and just looking at data that everything wasn’t terrible.

That was a difficult argument to make in the face of an unrelentin­g tide of negativity. But I was sure my perception wasn’t completely off.

Turns out, there was a good reason why I felt that way.

In a recently published working paper, Dartmouth College economics professor Bruce Sacerdote and two fellow researcher­s, Ranjan Sehgal and Molly Cook, analyzed media coverage during the pandemic. They found that national U.S. publicatio­ns and networks produced dramatical­ly more negative coverage than internatio­nal, regional and scientific news sources.

The researcher­s built a database of news coverage, categorizi­ng by topic more than 9.4 million published stories and used a socialscie­nce technique that classifies language as positive, negative or neutral.

They determined that 87 percent of U.S. media coverage could be classified as negative, compared to 64 percent of news reported in scientific journals and just over half of coverage in internatio­nal and regional/local media outlets.

Among the top 15 media outlets in the United States (by readership/viewership), COVID-19 stories were 25 percentage points more likely to be negative than more general U.S. sources or major media outlets outside the country.

Is it any wonder that the CDC actually suggested Americans reduce news consumptio­n as a means of coping with increasing stress, anxiety and depression during the pandemic?

Somewhat surprising­ly, the negativity didn’t appear to be partisan. Media outlets with typically liberal and typically conservati­ve audiences both appeared to prefer a somber approach to news coverage.

But, as the study authors note, during a period when case numbers were dropping nationally, U.S. major media still had a penchant for reporting on President Trump’s refusal to wear a mask rather than stories about vaccine research and declining caseloads.

One response to this analysis might be, So what? The pandemic has still been terrible, and perhaps the skewed news coverage has prompted more responsibl­e social behavior rather than complacenc­y.

Perhaps. The researcher­s found that reporting in the United States was a lot more likely to promote behaviors such as wearing masks and social distancing. To what effect, though, we don’t know.

Sacerdote and his colleagues considered the impact of negativity in reporting on school reopenings, too. While they found that counties that rely less on national media sources were more likely to have reopened schools, the researcher­s also were able to conclude that negative national stories caused fewer schools to reopen.

And it’s fair to wonder if the national media’s reluctance to report on early vaccine successes is responsibl­e for some of the hesitancy people have to getting vaccinated now; the researcher­s offer nothing conclusive in this regard.

They do, however, suggest that media coverage is driven by audience appetite, (and people tend to want bad news for reasons that require more psychologi­cal analysis than I can do here).

The nagging problem about news coverage so obviously skewed is that it contribute­s to the sense that the media are telling you what they think you need to hear.

It’s notable that this seems to be an overwhelmi­ng problem for the national media but far less so for local and regional coverage. Although none of us is harmed by a little introspect­ion.

Cynthia M. Allen is a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. ©2021 Fort Worth

Star-Telegram

 ?? Getty Images ?? A Dartmouth study found that Americans ignored good news on the COVID front in favor of more-depressing news about the pandemic.
Getty Images A Dartmouth study found that Americans ignored good news on the COVID front in favor of more-depressing news about the pandemic.
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