新冠肺炎大流行早期西班牙和美国大众媒体发布的健康相关行为推文的内容和用户参与度:观察性信息学研究。

IF 3.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
JMIR infodemiology Pub Date : 2023-08-22 DOI:10.2196/43685
Miguel Angel Alvarez-Mon, Victor Pereira-Sanchez, Elizabeth R Hooker, Facundo Sanchez, Melchor Alvarez-Mon, Alan R Teo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在早期大流行期间,欧洲和美国公众和政府对新冠肺炎的反应有很大差异。大众媒体是健康信息和新闻的重要来源,经常通过社交媒体传播这些信息,并可能影响公众和政策对疫情的反应。目的:本研究旨在描述美国和西班牙主要媒体在推特上发布与新冠肺炎相关的健康相关行为(HRB)的程度,比较两国媒体之间的推特模式,并确定用户对这些推特的反应。方法:我们调查了30家主要媒体(n=17,57%来自西班牙,n=13,43%来自美国)在2019年12月1日至2020年5月31日期间发布的推文,其中包括与新冠肺炎相关的HRB相关的关键词。我们将推文分为6类:戴口罩、保持身体距离、洗手、隔离或禁闭、消毒物品或多个HRB(之前HRB类别的任何组合)。此外,我们还评估了每条推文的点赞和转发量。泊松回归分析比较了不同HRB类别之间以及国家之间的平均预测点赞和转发数量。结果:在最初收集的50415条推文中,8552条包含与新冠肺炎相关的HRB相关的内容。其中,600条被随机选择进行培训,2351条推文被随机选择用于手动内容分析。在内容分析中包括的2351条新冠肺炎相关推文中,62.91%(1479/2351)提到了至少一条HRB。新冠肺炎推文中提及至少一种HRB的比例在各国之间存在显著差异(P=.006)。两国近一半的HRB推文中提到了隔离或监禁。相比之下,最不常被提及的HRB是西班牙6.9%(56/809)的消毒对象和美国9.1%(61/670)的洗手对象。在美国提到至少一个HRB的推文中,消毒物品的点赞和转发中位数最高,而在西班牙,与戴口罩和洗手相关的推文的点赞中位数最高。与提到不同HRB的推文相比,来自西班牙的推文中提到保持社交距离或消毒物品的预测点赞数要低得多(分别为P=0.02和P=0.01)。与提到不同HRB的推文相比,来自美国的推文中提到隔离、禁闭或消毒物品的预测点赞数要低得多(结论:在疫情早期,西班牙和美国的HRB内容类型和媒体推文参与度各不相同。然而,两国与隔离或禁闭以及洗手相关的内容相对较高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Content and User Engagement of Health-Related Behavior Tweets Posted by Mass Media Outlets From Spain and the United States Early in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Observational Infodemiology Study.

Content and User Engagement of Health-Related Behavior Tweets Posted by Mass Media Outlets From Spain and the United States Early in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Observational Infodemiology Study.

Background: During the early pandemic, there was substantial variation in public and government responses to COVID-19 in Europe and the United States. Mass media are a vital source of health information and news, frequently disseminating this information through social media, and may influence public and policy responses to the pandemic.

Objective: This study aims to describe the extent to which major media outlets in the United States and Spain tweeted about health-related behaviors (HRBs) relevant to COVID-19, compare the tweeting patterns between media outlets of both countries, and determine user engagement in response to these tweets.

Methods: We investigated tweets posted by 30 major media outlets (n=17, 57% from Spain and n=13, 43% from the United States) between December 1, 2019 and May 31, 2020, which included keywords related to HRBs relevant to COVID-19. We classified tweets into 6 categories: mask-wearing, physical distancing, handwashing, quarantine or confinement, disinfecting objects, or multiple HRBs (any combination of the prior HRB categories). Additionally, we assessed the likes and retweets generated by each tweet. Poisson regression analyses compared the average predicted number of likes and retweets between the different HRB categories and between countries.

Results: Of 50,415 tweets initially collected, 8552 contained content associated with an HRB relevant to COVID-19. Of these, 600 were randomly chosen for training, and 2351 tweets were randomly selected for manual content analysis. Of the 2351 COVID-19-related tweets included in the content analysis, 62.91% (1479/2351) mentioned at least one HRB. The proportion of COVID-19 tweets mentioning at least one HRB differed significantly between countries (P=.006). Quarantine or confinement was mentioned in nearly half of all the HRB tweets in both countries. In contrast, the least frequently mentioned HRBs were disinfecting objects in Spain 6.9% (56/809) and handwashing in the United States 9.1% (61/670). For tweets from the United States mentioning at least one HRB, disinfecting objects had the highest median likes and retweets, whereas mask-wearing- and handwashing-related tweets achieved the highest median number of likes in Spain. Tweets from Spain that mentioned social distancing or disinfecting objects had a significantly lower predicted count of likes compared with tweets mentioning a different HRB (P=.02 and P=.01, respectively). Tweets from the United States that mentioned quarantine or confinement or disinfecting objects had a significantly lower predicted number of likes compared with tweets mentioning a different HRB (P<.001), whereas mask- and handwashing-related tweets had a significantly greater predicted number of likes (P=.04 and P=.02, respectively).

Conclusions: The type of HRB content and engagement with media outlet tweets varied between Spain and the United States early in the pandemic. However, content related to quarantine or confinement and engagement with handwashing was relatively high in both countries.

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