Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
1.
Health Secur ; 19(1): 31-43, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1174869

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we investigate how message construction, style, content, and the textual content of embedded images impacted message retransmission over the course of the first 8 months of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in the United States. We analyzed a census of public communications (n = 372,466) from 704 public health agencies, state and local emergency management agencies, and elected officials posted on Twitter between January 1 and August 31, 2020, measuring message retransmission via the number of retweets (ie, a message passed on by others), an important indicator of engagement and reach. To assess content, we extended a lexicon developed from the early months of the pandemic to identify key concepts within messages, employing it to analyze both the textual content of messages themselves as well as text included within embedded images (n = 233,877), which was extracted via optical character recognition. Finally, we modelled the message retransmission process using a negative binomial regression, which allowed us to quantify the extent to which particular message features amplify or suppress retransmission, net of controls related to timing and properties of the sending account. In addition to identifying other predictors of retransmission, we show that the impact of images is strongly driven by content, with textual information in messages and embedded images operating in similar ways. We offer potential recommendations for crafting and deploying social media messages that can "cut through the noise" of an infodemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Information Dissemination/methods , Public Health Informatics/methods , Social Media/statistics & numerical data , Communication , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Social Marketing
2.
Health Secur ; 19(4): 370-378, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-990529

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we present a research agenda for longitudinal risk communication during a global pandemic. Starting from an understanding that traditional approaches to risk communication for epidemics, crises, and disasters have focused on short-duration events, we acknowledge the limitations of existing theories, frameworks, and models for both research and practice in a rapidly changing communication environment. We draw from scholarship in communication, sociology, anthropology, public health, emergency management, law, and technology to identify research questions that are fundamental to the communication challenges that have emerged under the threat of COVID-19. We pose a series of questions focused around 5 topics, then offer a catalog of prior research to serve as points of departure for future research efforts. This compiled agenda offers guidance to scholars engaging in practitioner-informed research and provides risk communicators with a set of substantial research questions to guide future knowledge needs.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Communicable Disease Control , Communication , Public Health , Risk Assessment , Attention , Humans , Motivation , Time Factors , Trust
3.
Health Secur ; 18(6): 454-460, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-851700

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we capture, identify, and describe the patterns of longitudinal risk communication from public health communicating agencies on Twitter during the first 60 days of the response to the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. We collected 138,546 tweets from 696 targeted accounts from February 1 to March 31, 2020, employing term frequency-inverse document frequency to identify keyword hashtags that were distinctive on each day. Our team conducted inductive content analysis to identify emergent themes that characterize shifts in public health risk communication efforts. As a result, we found 7 distinct periods of communication in the first 60 days of the pandemic, each characterized by a differing emphasis on communicating information, individual and collection action, sustaining motivation, and setting social norms. We found that longitudinal risk communication in response to the COVID-19 pandemic shifted as secondary threats arose, while continuing to promote pro-social activities to reduce impact on vulnerable populations. Identifying patterns of risk communication longitudinally allows public health communicators to observe changes in topics and priorities. Observations from the first 60 days of the COVID-19 pandemic prefigures ongoing messaging needs for this event and for future disease outbreaks.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Civil Defense , Communication , Public Health , Risk Assessment , Social Media , Humans , Motivation , Social Norms
4.
PLoS One ; 15(9): e0238491, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-771798

ABSTRACT

As the most visible face of health expertise to the general public, health agencies have played a central role in alerting the public to the emerging COVID-19 threat, providing guidance for protective action, motivating compliance with health directives, and combating misinformation. Social media platforms such as Twitter have been a critical tool in this process, providing a communication channel that allows both rapid dissemination of messages to the public at large and individual-level engagement. Message dissemination and amplification is a necessary precursor to reaching audiences, both online and off, as well as inspiring action. Therefore, it is valuable for organizational risk communication to identify strategies and practices that may lead to increased message passing among online users. In this research, we examine message features shown in prior disasters to increase or decrease message retransmission under imminent threat conditions to develop models of official risk communicators' messages shared online from February 1, 2020-April 30, 2020. We develop a lexicon of keywords associated with risk communication about the pandemic response, then use automated coding to identify message content and message structural features. We conduct chi-square analyses and negative binomial regression modeling to identify the strategies used by official risk communicators that respectively increase and decrease message retransmission. Findings show systematic changes in message strategies over time and identify key features that affect message passing, both positively and negatively. These results have the potential to aid in message design strategies as the pandemic continues, or in similar future events.


Subject(s)
Betacoronavirus , Communicable Diseases, Emerging , Communication , Coronavirus Infections , Information Dissemination/methods , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral , Social Media , COVID-19 , Chi-Square Distribution , Emergencies , Emergency Medical Services/organization & administration , Government Agencies , Humans , Internet , Mass Media , Models, Statistical , Models, Theoretical , Public Health Administration , SARS-CoV-2 , Safety Management , Social Media/statistics & numerical data
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL