School of Earth, Environment & Society, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, L8S 4K1, Canada.
School of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue W, Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada.
Health Place. 2021 May;69:102568. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2021.102568. Epub 2021 Apr 13.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, public health agencies and decision-makers have used social media to disseminate information, encourage changes to behaviour and promote community supports and resources. Their communications have served to educate the public on risks and initiate the widespread adoption of public health measures to 'flatten the curve'. We conducted a content analysis of COVID-19 Tweets by Canadian public health accounts during the first 6 months of the pandemic to explore differences in Tweeting practices by geography and identify opportunities to improve risk communication. We found that Canadian public health accounts in particular geographic settings did not always apply best practices for health communication. Tweeting practices differed considerably between jurisdictions with varying burdens of COVID-19. Going forward, Tweets authored by public health accounts that promote behaviour change and community-building ought to be utilized whenever risks to health are high to reflect an increase in disease transmission requiring intervention. Our study highlights the need for public health communicators to deliver messaging that is relevant for the levels of risk that their audiences are encountering in a given geographic context.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,公共卫生机构和决策者利用社交媒体传播信息、鼓励行为改变以及促进社区支持和资源。他们的信息传播旨在教育公众了解风险,并广泛采取公共卫生措施以“减缓曲线”。我们对大流行前 6 个月加拿大公共卫生机构的 COVID-19 推文进行了内容分析,以探讨地理差异对推文实践的影响,并确定改善风险沟通的机会。我们发现,特定地理环境下的加拿大公共卫生机构并不总是采用健康沟通的最佳实践。COVID-19 负担不同的司法管辖区之间的推文做法差异很大。展望未来,只要健康风险较高,就应该利用公共卫生账户发布的推文来促进行为改变和社区建设,因为疾病传播需要干预。我们的研究强调了公共卫生传播者提供信息的必要性,这些信息要与受众在特定地理背景下遇到的风险水平相关。