社交媒体上分享的避孕内容:对 Twitter 的分析。

IF 2.2 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Melody Huang, Alba Gutiérrez-Sacristán, Elizabeth Janiak, Katherine Young, Anabel Starosta, Katherine Blanton, Alaleh Azhir, Caroline N Goldfarb, Felícita Kuperwasser, Kimberly M Schaefer, Rachel E Stoddard, Rajet Vatsa, Allison A Merz-Herrala, Deborah Bartz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:社交媒体上的信息可能会影响人们的避孕决策。我们对流行的社交媒体平台 Twitter(最近更名为 X)上的避孕内容进行了探索性分析:我们从 2014 年 1 月至 2019 年 12 月期间发布的与可逆处方避孕方法相关的公开可用英语推文中随机抽取了 1%。我们对避孕贴片的推文进行了过度采样,以确保每种方法至少有 200 条推文。为了创建代码集,我们确定了推文内容主题、推文来源以及征求信息或提供建议的推文的共同主题。所有帖子均由两名团队成员进行编码,并由第三名审查员对差异进行裁定。在报告描述性分析的同时,还报告了定性分析结果:在研究期间,共发布了 457369 条有关可逆避孕方法的推文,最终分析采用了随机抽样的 4434 条推文。推文最常讨论的是避孕方法的决策(26.7%)和副作用(20.5%),尤其是长效可逆避孕方法和醋酸甲羟孕酮注射液。短效可逆避孕药常用的推文是关于使用或坚持的后勤工作。避孕药具消费者经常发布推文(50.6%)。小部分推文明确要求提供信息(6.2%)或提供建议(4.2%):临床医生应该意识到,个人通过推特接触到的信息可能会影响对避孕药具的看法和决策,尤其是关于长效可逆避孕药具的信息。社交媒体是研究传统健康研究中缺失的避孕观念的重要来源,专业人员可利用社交媒体传播准确的避孕信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contraceptive content shared on social media: an analysis of Twitter.

Background: Information on social media may affect peoples' contraceptive decision making. We performed an exploratory analysis of contraceptive content on Twitter (recently renamed X), a popular social media platform.

Methods: We selected a random subset of 1% of publicly available, English-language tweets related to reversible, prescription contraceptive methods posted between January 2014 and December 2019. We oversampled tweets for the contraceptive patch to ensure at least 200 tweets per method. To create the codebook, we identified common themes specific to tweet content topics, tweet sources, and tweets soliciting information or providing advice. All posts were coded by two team members, and differences were adjudicated by a third reviewer. Descriptive analyses were reported with accompanying qualitative findings.

Results: During the study period, 457,369 tweets about reversible contraceptive methods were published, with a random sample of 4,434 tweets used for final analysis. Tweets most frequently discussed contraceptive method decision-making (26.7%) and side effects (20.5%), particularly for long-acting reversible contraceptive methods and the depot medroxyprogesterone acetate shot. Tweets about logistics of use or adherence were common for short-acting reversible contraceptives. Tweets were frequently posted by contraceptive consumers (50.6%). A small proportion of tweets explicitly requested information (6.2%) or provided advice (4.2%).

Conclusions: Clinicians should be aware that individuals are exposed to information through Twitter that may affect contraceptive perceptions and decision making, particularly regarding long-acting reversible contraceptives. Social media is a valuable source for studying contraceptive beliefs missing in traditional health research and may be used by professionals to disseminate accurate contraceptive information.

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