RT Journal Article T1 COVID-19 media coverage decreasing despite deepening crisis A1 Pearman, Olivia A1 Boykoff, Maxwell A1 Osborne-Gowey, Jeremiah A1 Jiménez Gómez, Isidro AB The COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread rapidly across the globe, 1 and yet media coverage of the pandemic has decreased since the initial flurry of attention received during the beginning of the crisis in early 2020. Despite this decrease, public attention to the COVID-19 pandemic remains high, relative to the public’s attention to other issues, and appears to have largely been supplanted and displaced rather than combined and connected with the attention paid to climate change and other societal challenges. Connections between COVID-19 and climate change, among many intersectional challenges, are varied and complex, 2 and merit further attention in the public sphere. PB Elsevier SN 2542-5196 YR 2021 FD 2021-01-01 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/97284 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/97284 LA eng NO Pearman, O., Boykoff, M., Osborne-Gowey, J., Aoyagi, M., Ballantyne, A. G., Chandler, P., ... & Ytterstad, A. (2021). COVID-19 media coverage decreasing despite deepening crisis. The Lancet Planetary Health, 5(1), e6-e7. DS Docta Complutense RD 22 jul 2024