Social Media and Healthcare
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Using social media to deliver COVID-19 public health announcements customized to individuals’ identities is a promising measure to increase compliance with guidelines - Study

Using social media to deliver COVID-19 public health announcements customized to individuals’ identities is a promising measure to increase compliance with guidelines - Study | Social Media and Healthcare | Scoop.it

Public compliance with recommended guidelines to limit the spread of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 is an important component in combating the disease .

 

Current guidelines suggest several measures, such as wearing a mask and staying at home; nonetheless, a large number of individuals fail to follow the guidelines provided by public health officials.

 

Public compliance to guidelines remains an issue

Public health campaigns aimed at curbing the spread of COVID-19 are important in reducing disease transmission, but traditional information-based campaigns have received unexpectedly extreme backlash.

 

Objective and Methodology: This study aimed to investigate whether customizing of public service announcements (PSAs) providing health guidelines to match individuals’ identities increases their compliance. 

We conducted a within- and between-subjects, randomized controlled cross-sectional, web-based study in July 2020. Participants viewed two PSAs: one advocating wearing a mask in public settings and one advocating staying at home. The control PSA only provided information, and the treatment PSAs were designed to appeal to the identities held by individuals; that is, either a Christian identity or an economically motivated identity. Participants were asked about their identity and then provided a control PSA and treatment PSA matching their identity, in random order. The PSAs were of approximately 100 words.

 

Results: We recruited 300 social media users from Amazon Mechanical Turk in accordance with usual protocols to ensure data quality. In total, 8 failed the data quality checks, and the remaining 292 were included in the analysis. In the identity-based PSA, the source of the PSA was changed, and a phrase of approximately 12 words relevant to the individual’s identity was inserted. A PSA tailored for Christians, when matched with a Christian identity, increased the likelihood of compliance by 12 percentage points. A PSA that focused on economic values, when shown to individuals who identified as economically motivated, increased the likelihood of compliance by 6 points.

 

Conclusions: Using social media to deliver COVID-19 public health announcements customized to individuals’ identities is a promising measure to increase compliance with public health guidelines.

 

read the paper at https://publichealth.jmir.org/2021/4/e25762/

 

nrip's insight:

Social media is a very good way to meet the general public where they are.

 

Multi channel, multi format content strategies towards

  • dissemination of  public health information
  • as well as feedback solicitation,
  • protocol setting
  • and providing guidance to the general public

must be designed and deployed during any sort of emergency, not necessarily pandemics.

Evan Park's curator insight, July 12, 2021 12:48 PM
With the corona virus still hitting the world hard there were measures put into place to show what the data looks like for the various different cases. The article uses numbers to show the effects of what will happen if people do not listen. 
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How Twitter can be used to address specific health issues

How Twitter can be used to address specific health issues | Social Media and Healthcare | Scoop.it

A new study led by Jenine K. Harris, PhD, examined the use of the hashtag #childhoodobesity in tweets to track Twitter conversations about the issue of overweight kids.


The study noted that conversations involving childhood obesity on Twitter don't often include comments from representatives of government and public health organizations that likely have evidence relating to how best to approach this issue. The authors think maybe they should.


Twitter use is growing nationwide. In its 2014 Twitter update, the Pew Research Center found that Twitter is used more by those in lower-income groups, which traditionally are more difficult to reach with health information.


While younger Americans also are more likely to use Twitter, it is used equally across education groups and is used more by non-white Americans than whites.


This, Harris said, is one of the reasons Twitter is an avenue that the academic and government sources with accurate health information should consider taking advantage of in order to reach a wide variety of people.


"I think public health so far doesn't have a great game plan for using social media, we're still laying the foundation for that," she said. "We're still learning what works.


"Public health communities, politicians, and government sources -- people who really know what works -- should join in the conversation. Then we might be able to make an impact," she said.

more at http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/07/140710151723.htm


askdrmaxwell's curator insight, July 14, 2014 6:09 PM

Do you use social media for your health questions and research?