Geographical and Temporal Analysis of Tweets Related to COVID-19 and Cardiovascular Disease in the US.

IF 2.7 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Xuan Zhang, Lan Mu, Donglan Zhang, Yuping Mao, Lu Shi, Janani Rajbhandari-Thapa, Zhuo Chen, Yan Li, José A Pagán
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in more than 600 million confirmed cases worldwide since December 2021. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is both a risk factor for COVID-19 mortality and a complication that many COVID-19 patients develop. This study uses Twitter data to identify the spatiotemporal patterns and correlation of related tweets with daily COVID-19 cases and deaths at the national, regional, and state levels. We collected tweets mentioning both COVID-19 and CVD-related words from February to July 2020 (Eastern Time) and geocoded the tweets to the state level using GIScience techniques. We further proposed and validated that the Twitter user registration state can be a feasible proxy of geotags. We applied geographical and temporal analysis to investigate where and when people talked about COVID-19 and CVD. Our results indicated that the trend of COVID-19 and CVD-related tweets is correlated to the trend of COVID-19, especially the daily deaths. These social media messages revealed widespread recognition of CVD's important role in the COVID-19 pandemic, even before the medical community started to develop consensus and theory supports about CVD aspects of COVID-19. The second wave of the pandemic caused another rise in the related tweets but not as much as the first one, as tweet frequency increased from February to April, decreased till June, and bounced back in July. At the regional level, four regions (Northeast, Midwest, North, and West) had the same trend of related tweets compared to the country as a whole. However, only the Northeast region had a high correlation (0.8-0.9) between the tweet count, new cases, and new deaths. For the second wave of confirmed new cases, the major contributing regions, South and West, did not ripple as many related tweets as the first wave. Our understanding is that the early news attracted more attention and discussion all over the U.S. in the first wave, even though some regions were not impacted as much as the Northeast at that time. The study can be expanded to more geographic and temporal scales, and with more physical and socioeconomic variables, with better data acquisition in the future.

Abstract Image

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美国与COVID-19和心血管疾病相关的推文的地理和时间分析。
自2021年12月以来,COVID-19大流行已在全球造成6亿多例确诊病例。心血管疾病(CVD)既是COVID-19死亡的危险因素,也是许多COVID-19患者出现的并发症。本研究使用推特数据来确定相关推文与国家、地区和州三级每日COVID-19病例和死亡的时空模式和相关性。我们收集了2020年2月至7月(美国东部时间)期间提到COVID-19和cvd相关词汇的推文,并利用GIScience技术对推文进行了州一级的地理编码。我们进一步提出并验证了Twitter用户注册状态可以作为地理标签的一个可行代理。我们应用地理和时间分析来调查人们在何时何地谈论COVID-19和心血管疾病。我们的研究结果表明,COVID-19和cvd相关推文的趋势与COVID-19的趋势相关,尤其是每日死亡人数。这些社交媒体信息显示,即使在医学界开始就COVID-19的心血管疾病方面达成共识和理论支持之前,人们就已广泛认识到心血管疾病在COVID-19大流行中的重要作用。第二波疫情导致相关推文再次增加,但没有第一次那么多,推文频率从2月到4月增加,到6月减少,到7月反弹。在地区层面上,四个地区(东北、中西部、北部和西部)与全国整体相比,相关推文的趋势相同。然而,只有东北地区在推特数量、新病例和新死亡人数之间具有高相关性(0.8-0.9)。对于第二波确诊病例,主要贡献地区南部和西部没有像第一波那样引发那么多的相关推文。我们的理解是,早期的新闻在第一波中引起了全美国更多的关注和讨论,尽管当时一些地区受到的影响没有东北那么大。这项研究可以扩展到更多的地理和时间尺度,以及更多的物理和社会经济变量,并在未来获得更好的数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Annals of GIS
Annals of GIS Multiple-
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
2.00%
发文量
31
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