平台对公共卫生传播的影响:Twitter和Facebook信息设计和受众参与的比较研究

IF 3.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
JMIR infodemiology Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.2196/40198
Nic DePaula, Loni Hagen, Stiven Roytman, Dana Alnahass
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:公共卫生机构广泛采用社交媒体进行健康和风险沟通。此外,不同的平台有不同的功能,这可能会影响消息的质量和性质,以及公众与内容的互动方式。然而,在健康和风险沟通研究中,通常不会比较这些平台效应,之前也没有对COVID-19大流行进行比较。目的:本研究通过比较美国地方、州和联邦公共卫生机构在疫情期间发布的与covid -19相关的帖子中的信息元素和受众参与度,衡量Twitter和Facebook对公共卫生信息设计和参与的潜在媒体影响,推进社交媒体上的公共卫生信息传递理论,并为量身定制的社交媒体传播策略提供建议。方法:检索Twitter和Facebook上与卫生和传染病相关的美国主要联邦机构、所有主要州公共卫生机构以及选定的地方公共卫生部门发布的所有与covid -19相关的帖子。从96个机构的179个不同账户中检索了2020年全年与COVID-19相关的100,785个帖子。我们采用了一个社交媒体消息元素的框架来分析Facebook和Twitter上的帖子。对于手工内容分析,我们对1677篇文章进行了抽样。我们计算了各种消息元素在各个平台上的流行程度,并评估了差异的统计意义。我们还计算并评估了Facebook和Twitter的消息元素与共享和喜欢的标准化度量之间的关联。结果:消息元素的分布在两个站点之间非常相似。然而,与Twitter相比,政治人物(PP= 0.01)和非政治人物(P= 0.01)在Facebook上的帖子明显更多。结论:总的来说,我们发现Twitter信息和用户具有数据和政策导向,Facebook具有本地和个人导向,尽管跨平台也有许多相似之处。影响用户粘性的信息元素在不同平台上是相似的,但也有一些显著的区别。这项研究为社交媒体网站上COVID-19公共卫生信息的差异提供了新的证据,提高了社交媒体上公共卫生传播的知识,并为这些在线平台上的健康和风险传播策略提供了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Platform Effects on Public Health Communication: A Comparative and National Study of Message Design and Audience Engagement Across Twitter and Facebook.

Platform Effects on Public Health Communication: A Comparative and National Study of Message Design and Audience Engagement Across Twitter and Facebook.

Platform Effects on Public Health Communication: A Comparative and National Study of Message Design and Audience Engagement Across Twitter and Facebook.

Platform Effects on Public Health Communication: A Comparative and National Study of Message Design and Audience Engagement Across Twitter and Facebook.

Background: Public health agencies widely adopt social media for health and risk communication. Moreover, different platforms have different affordances, which may impact the quality and nature of the messaging and how the public engages with the content. However, these platform effects are not often compared in studies of health and risk communication and not previously for the COVID-19 pandemic.

Objective: This study measures the potential media effects of Twitter and Facebook on public health message design and engagement by comparing message elements and audience engagement in COVID-19-related posts by local, state, and federal public health agencies in the United States during the pandemic, to advance theories of public health messaging on social media and provide recommendations for tailored social media communication strategies.

Methods: We retrieved all COVID-19-related posts from major US federal agencies related to health and infectious disease, all major state public health agencies, and selected local public health departments on Twitter and Facebook. A total of 100,785 posts related to COVID-19, from 179 different accounts of 96 agencies, were retrieved for the entire year of 2020. We adopted a framework of social media message elements to analyze the posts across Facebook and Twitter. For manual content analysis, we subsampled 1677 posts. We calculated the prevalence of various message elements across the platforms and assessed the statistical significance of differences. We also calculated and assessed the association between message elements with normalized measures of shares and likes for both Facebook and Twitter.

Results: Distributions of message elements were largely similar across both sites. However, political figures (P<.001), experts (P=.01), and nonpolitical personalities (P=.01) were significantly more present on Facebook posts compared to Twitter. Infographics (P<.001), surveillance information (P<.001), and certain multimedia elements (eg, hyperlinks, P<.001) were more prevalent on Twitter. In general, Facebook posts received more (normalized) likes (0.19%) and (normalized) shares (0.22%) compared to Twitter likes (0.08%) and shares (0.05%). Elements with greater engagement on Facebook included expressives and collectives, whereas posts related to policy were more engaged with on Twitter. Science information (eg, scientific explanations) comprised 8.5% (73/851) of Facebook and 9.4% (78/826) of Twitter posts. Correctives of misinformation only appeared in 1.2% (11/851) of Facebook and 1.4% (12/826) of Twitter posts.

Conclusions: In general, we find a data and policy orientation for Twitter messages and users and a local and personal orientation for Facebook, although also many similarities across platforms. Message elements that impact engagement are similar across platforms but with some notable distinctions. This study provides novel evidence for differences in COVID-19 public health messaging across social media sites, advancing knowledge of public health communication on social media and recommendations for health and risk communication strategies on these online platforms.

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