“…Education and training on health/eHealth literacy were required for the public communities or individuals to increase their ability to differentiate reliable information from the rumors. ( Durodolu and Ibenne, 2020 ; Wormer, 2020 ; Mokhtari and Mirzaei, 2020 ; Mondiale de la Santé, 2020 ; Gottlieb and Dyer, 2020 ; Chou et al., 2021 ; Bastani and Bahrami, 2020 ; Vanderpool et al., 2020 ; Okereke et al., 2020 ; Schiavo, 2020 ; Morgan-Daniel et al., 2020 ; Alvarez-Risco et al., 2020 ; Chong et al., 2020 ; Cichocka, 2020 ; Scerri and Grech, 2020 ; Patel et al., 2020 ; Yu and Mani, 2020 ; Ahmed, 2020 ; Hui et al., 2020 ; Clark-Ginsberg et al., 2020 ; Vraga et al., 2020 ; Sharma et al., 2020 ; Xie et al., 2020 ; Dakhesh et al., 2020 ; Eysenbach, 2002 ; Graham, 2021 ; Morley et al., 2020 ; Vervoort et al., 2020 ; Sperry and Scheibe, 2002 ; Khan et al., 2020 ; Ratzan et al., 2020 ; Hartley and Vu, 2020 ) Empirical studies showed that an empowering intervention was able to significantly reduce the conspiracy beliefs among the public, hence reducing the spreading of rumors ( van Stekelenburg et al., 2021 ; Richardson et al., 2020 ).…”