Wong Roger, Harris Jenine K, Staub Mackenzie, Bernhardt Jay M
Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri (Mr Wong, Dr Harris, and Ms Staub); and Center for Health Communication, Moody College of Communication, The University of Texas at Austin (Dr Bernhardt).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2017 Mar/Apr;23(2):e16-e24. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000342.
The first imported US Ebola hemorrhagic fever case during the 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak triggered an increase in online activity through various social media platforms, including Twitter.
The purpose of our study was to examine characteristics of local health departments (LHDs) tweeting about Ebola, in addition to how and when LHDs were communicating Ebola-related messages.
All tweets sent by 287 LHDs known to be using Twitter were collected from September 3 to November 2, 2014. Twitter data were merged with the 2013 National Association of County & City Health Officials Profile study to assess LHD characteristics associated with sending Ebola-related tweets. To examine the content of Ebola tweets, we reviewed all such tweets and developed a codebook including 4 major message categories: information giving, news update, event promotion, and preparedness. A time line tracking the trends in Ebola tweets was created by aligning daily tweets with major Ebola news events posted on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Ebola Web site.
Approximately 60% (n = 174) of all LHDs using Twitter sent a total of 1648 Ebola-related tweets during the study period. Sending more tweets in general (odds ratio: 2.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.00-5.84) and employing at least 1 public information specialist (odds ratio: 2.61; 95% confidence interval, 1.14-5.95) significantly increased the odds that an LHD tweeted about Ebola. Of all the Ebola tweets collected, 78.6% were information giving, 22.5% were on preparedness, 20.8% were news updates, and 10.3% were event promotion tweets. A temporal analysis of Ebola tweets indicated 5 distinct waves, each corresponding with major Ebola news events.
Twitter has become a communication tool frequently used by many LHDs to respond to novel outbreaks, but messaging strategies vary widely across LHDs. We recommend that LHDs increase tweet frequency during public health emergencies in order to ensure timely dissemination of critical information.
2014年西非埃博拉疫情期间,美国首例输入性埃博拉出血热病例引发了包括推特在内的各种社交媒体平台上的网络活动增加。
我们研究的目的是调查地方卫生部门(LHD)在推特上发布关于埃博拉信息的特点,以及LHD传达埃博拉相关信息的方式和时间。
收集了已知在使用推特的287个LHD在2014年9月3日至1月2日期间发送的所有推文。推特数据与2013年全国县市卫生官员协会概况研究相结合,以评估与发送埃博拉相关推文相关的LHD特征。为了检查埃博拉推文的内容,我们审查了所有此类推文,并制定了一个包含4个主要信息类别的编码手册:提供信息、新闻更新、活动推广和准备工作。通过将每日推文与疾病控制和预防中心埃博拉网站上发布的主要埃博拉新闻事件对齐,创建了一条跟踪埃博拉推文趋势的时间线。
在研究期间,所有使用推特的LHD中约60%(n = 174)共发送了1648条与埃博拉相关的推文。总体而言,发送更多推文(优势比:2.42;95%置信区间,1.00 - 5.84)以及雇用至少1名公共信息专家(优势比:2.61;95%置信区间,1.14 - 5.95)显著增加了LHD发布关于埃博拉推文的可能性。在收集的所有埃博拉推文中,78.6%是提供信息,22.5%是关于准备工作,20.8%是新闻更新,10.3%是活动推广推文。对埃博拉推文的时间分析表明有5个不同的波峰,每个波峰都与主要的埃博拉新闻事件相对应。
推特已成为许多LHD用于应对新疫情的常用沟通工具,但不同LHD的信息传播策略差异很大。我们建议LHD在公共卫生紧急情况期间增加推文频率,以确保关键信息的及时传播。