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Section 1. The public good, cybercrime, and cybersecurity in an age of pandemic. Chapter 1. What is the "public good" in a pandemic? who decides?: policy makers and the need for leadership in society's perception of medical information ; Chapter 2. Cyberchondria, coronavirus, and cybercrime: a perfect storm ; Chapter 3. Cybersecurity and privacy in the age of the pandemic -- Section 2. The digitisation of healthcare: patient, medical student, and clinical perspectives. Chapter 4. The digitisation of healthcare in a global pandemic: implications for healthcare quality from patient, clinician, and provider perspectives ; Chapter 5. The impact of medical or health-related internet searches on patient compliance: the Dr. net study ; Chapter 6. Cyberchondria and medical student syndrome: an anxious path to be an anxiety healer? -- Section 3. Treatment of cyberchondria: from cognitive behavioural therapy techniques to self-help therapeutic tools. Chapter 7. Cognitive behavioral perspective on the conceptualization and treatment of cyberchondria ; Chapter 8. Mindful use of facebook as a self-help therapeutic tool in psychological settings ; Chapter 9. A solution focused consideration of cyberchondria ; Chapter 10. Cyberchondria in the time of the COVID-19 pandemic -- Section 4. The COVID-19 pandemic: research, analysis, policy, and practice. Chapter 11. A systematic analysis of current studies (2021) in the field ofcyberchondria ; Chapter 12. The impact of COVID-19 on educational leader wellbeing ; Chapter 13. Cyberchondria during the COVID-19 pandemic: an Indian perspective -- Section 5. Health literacy, digital literacy, and information seeking. Chapter 14. A study determining the health literacy levels of young adults during COVID-19 ; Chapter 15. Health literacy and cyberchondria ; Chapter 16. The relationship between digital literacy and cyberchondria -- Section 6. Health journalism, the role of media, digital communication, and the knowledge gap. Chapter 17. Health journalism and representation of campaign news of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) patients ; Chapter 18. New media and digital paranoia: extreme skepticismin digital communication ; Chapter 19. Social media and the knowledge gap: research on the appearance of COVID-19 in Turkey and the knowledge level of users. |