为未来的大流行做准备:根据COVID-19大流行和疫苗犹豫对社交媒体的定性探索。

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-07-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004317
Emmanuel A Odame, Oluwabunmi Dada, Jordan Nelson, Ayorinde Ogunyiola, Jessica Haley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

疫苗犹豫仍然是全球疫苗接种运动和疫苗规划取得成功的一个重大障碍。在疾病暴发期间,了解人们在社交媒体上对疫苗的看法有助于减少由社会因素引起的疫苗犹豫,并改善规划的实施。在评估公众对包括疫苗采用在内的关键问题的看法方面,社交媒体日益成为一种有价值的工具。这项研究调查了美国、巴西和印度的推特用户在疫苗发布后几周内对COVID-19疫苗的看法。这些国家与反疫苗运动和疫苗可预防疾病的爆发有关。我们在2858条Twitter帖子中确定并分析了与疫苗认知相关的关键主题。使用定性解释方法分析推文,我们发现对疫苗科学的不信任,疫苗接种政治和宗教抵制是分析中出现的主要主题。个人持有并通过大众传播平台频繁传播的观念可能会侵蚀公众信任,并破坏公共卫生官员与社区之间的沟通渠道。因此,我们建议在社交媒体上利用与疫苗犹豫有关的信息,可以增进对公众对疫苗看法的了解,同时为开展介入性沟通以教育公众提供机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preparing for future pandemics: A qualitative exploration of social media in light of the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine hesitancy.

Vaccine hesitancy remains a significant barrier to the success of global vaccination campaigns and vaccine programs. Understanding people's perceptions of vaccines on social media during disease outbreaks can aid in reducing socially induced vaccine hesitancy and improve program implementation. Social media is an increasingly valuable tool for assessing public perceptions on critical issues, including vaccine adoption. This study examines perceptions surrounding the COVID-19 vaccine among Twitter users in the United States, Brazil, and India within a few weeks post-vaccine release. These countries are associated with anti-vaccine movements and outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases. We identified and analyzed key themes related to vaccine perception in 2,858 Twitter posts. Using a qualitative interpretive approach to analyze tweets, we found that mistrust in vaccine science, politics of vaccination, and religious pushbacks were the main themes that emerged from the analysis. Perceptions harbored by individuals and communicated frequently via mass communication platforms may erode public trust and disarticulate avenues of communication between public health officials and communities. Thus, we suggest that harnessing vaccine hesitancy-related information on social media can enhance understanding of public perceptions about vaccines while providing opportunities for interventional communications to educate the public.

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