I don't think we have to change anything systematically. That study was conducted in a fairly controlled environment. There were four groups of developers solving the same problems. Three of the groups were restricted to using only one resource (the official documentation, Stack Overflow, or two books that were provided). There was also a fourth group that was allowed to choose the resource they thought was best (which I think is how most people actually code).
The results of the study show that people in the Book and Stack Overflow groups performed best at getting their code to work, but the Stack Overflow group produced significantly less secure code than the other groups.
But the study goes on to say the following (emphasis added):
We also asked about the effect of participants' assigned resource on their performance. In every non-free condition, the large majority (official: 92.3% (12/13); book: 92.9% (13/14); SO: 78.6% (11/14)) said they would have performed better on the tasks if they had been allowed to use different resources. In particular, official and book participants said they would have liked to access Stack Overflow or search engines such as Google, so that they could search for their specific problems rather than reading background information. One book user mentioned the “danger that books could be outdated.” On the other hand, many SO participants said they would have liked to access the official documentation to read up on background information for their problems.
So it looks like people are already aware that they shouldn't rely solely on code they found on Stack Overflow, even when they get things working. Given a choice, they'd refer to the documentation in addition to Stack Overflow.
That's not to say that we shouldn't do anything. If you see a highly-upvoted, accepted answer that's out of date, definitely feel free to provide a better answer, or at least post a link to the documentation in the comments. If I take anything away from that study, it's that making secure code easier is the best way to make sure people actually write secure code.