From the Department of Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The Centre for Computational Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, Peter Gilgan Centre for Research and Learning, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Anesth Analg. 2021 Aug 1;133(2):515-525. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005602.
Twitter is a web-based social media platform that allows instantaneous sharing of user-generated messages (tweets). We performed an infodemiology study of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) Twitter conversation related to anesthesiology to describe how Twitter has been used during the pandemic and ways to optimize Twitter use by anesthesiologists.
This was a cross-sectional study of tweets related to the specialty of anesthesiology and COVID-19 tweeted between January 21 and October 13, 2020. A publicly available COVID-19 Twitter dataset was filtered for tweets meeting inclusion criteria (tweets including anesthesiology keywords). Using descriptive statistics, tweets were reviewed for tweet and account characteristics. Tweets were filtered for specific topics of interest likely to be impactful or informative to anesthesiologists of COVID-19 practice (airway management, personal protective equipment, ventilators, COVID testing, and pain management). Tweet activity was also summarized descriptively to show temporal profiles over the pandemic.
Between January 21 and October 13, 2020, 23,270 of 241,732,881 tweets (0.01%) met inclusion criteria and were generated by 15,770 accounts. The majority (51.9%) of accounts were from the United States. Seven hundred forty-nine (4.8%) of all users self-reported as anesthesiologists. 33.8% of all tweets included at least one word or phrase preceded by the # symbol (hashtag), which functions as a label to search for all tweets including a specific hashtag, with the most frequently used being #anesthesia. About half (52.2%) of all tweets included at least one hyperlink, most frequently linked to other social media, news organizations, medical organizations, or scientific publications. The majority of tweets (67%) were not retweeted. COVID-19 anesthesia tweet activity started before the pandemic was declared. The trend of daily tweet activity was similar to, and preceded, the US daily death count by about 2 weeks.
The toll of the pandemic has been reflected in the anesthesiology conversation on Twitter, representing 0.01% of all COVID-19 tweets. Daily tweet activity showed how the Twitter community used the platform to learn about important topics impacting anesthesiology practice during a global pandemic. Twitter is a relevant platform through which to communicate about anesthesiology topics, but further research is required to delineate its effectiveness, benefits, and limitations for anesthesiology discussions.
Twitter 是一个基于网络的社交媒体平台,允许用户即时分享生成的信息(推文)。我们对与麻醉学相关的 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的 Twitter 对话进行了信息流行病学研究,以描述 Twitter 在大流行期间的使用方式以及麻醉师如何优化 Twitter 的使用。
这是一项横断面研究,研究对象是 2020 年 1 月 21 日至 10 月 13 日期间与麻醉学专业相关的 COVID-19 推文。使用公开的 COVID-19 Twitter 数据集,对符合纳入标准的推文(包含麻醉学关键词的推文)进行筛选。使用描述性统计,对推文和账户特征进行回顾。对可能对 COVID-19 实践中的麻醉师具有影响或信息性的特定主题(气道管理、个人防护设备、呼吸机、COVID 检测和疼痛管理)的推文进行筛选。还对推文活动进行了描述性总结,以显示大流行期间的时间分布。
在 2020 年 1 月 21 日至 10 月 13 日期间,241732881 条推文中有 23270 条(0.01%)符合纳入标准,由 15770 个账户发布。其中,来自美国的账户占大多数(51.9%)。749 名(4.8%)用户自我报告为麻醉师。所有推文中,有 33.8%至少包含一个以#符号(标签)开头的单词或短语,标签的作用是搜索所有包含特定标签的推文,最常用的标签是#anesthesia。大约一半(52.2%)的推文至少包含一个超链接,最常链接到其他社交媒体、新闻机构、医学组织或科学出版物。大多数推文(67%)未被转发。COVID-19 麻醉推文活动在大流行宣布之前就已经开始。每日推文活动的趋势与美国每日死亡人数相似,大约提前两周。
大流行的影响反映在 Twitter 上的麻醉学对话中,占所有 COVID-19 推文的 0.01%。每日推文活动展示了 Twitter 社区如何利用该平台了解影响麻醉学实践的重要话题。Twitter 是一个相关的平台,可以用来交流麻醉学话题,但需要进一步研究来确定其对麻醉学讨论的有效性、益处和局限性。