Harrison Denise, RamaRao Saumya, Vijeyakumar Dinesh, McKinnon James, Brown Kristina, Mierzwa Stanley
United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Washington, DC, USA .
Poluation Council, New York City, New York, USA.
Online J Public Health Inform. 2021 Sep 8;13(2):e11. doi: 10.5210/ojphi.v13i2.11094. eCollection 2021.
Stakeholders are coming together to develop a vision for increasing access to family planning (FP) by 2030. Of the 923 million women in the developing world who wish to avoid a pregnancy, 218 million women are not using a modern contraceptive (Guttmacher Institute, 2020). In 2016, over 3.4 billion people were using the internet (https://ourworldindata.org/internet 2016). Moreover, internet users in the developing world use social media more frequently than Internet users in the U.S. and Europe. Of the many proposed actions to accelerate progress in family planning, the use of Twitter should be a key component. In this commentary, we describe the use of Twitter in a select group of low-and-middle-income countries that have made commitments to the family planning 2020 initiative (FP2020 countries and have the potential to leverage Twitter with current and potential family planning users. We examine Twitter feeds in eight key FP2020 countries, and we look at the content of Tweets issued by the ministries of health in most of these same countries. Our view is that it is feasible and easy to access Twitter feeds in low-and -middle income countries. We base our view on the types of reproductive health and family planning terms discussed in a public forum such as Twitter by current and potential users and their partners and ministries of health. We highlight two broad considerations that merit discussion among interested stakeholders, including policy makers, program designers, and health advocates. The first relates to the use of Twitter within family planning programs, and the second relates to themes that require more significant research. Data coupled with analytical capacity will help policy makers and program designers to effectively leverage Twitter for expanding the reach of family planning services and influencing social media policy. Our aim is to not only to contribute to the body of knowledge but also to spur greater engagement by program personnel, researchers, health advocates and contraceptive users.
利益相关者齐聚一堂,共同制定到2030年增加计划生育服务可及性的愿景。在发展中世界希望避免怀孕的9.23亿妇女中,有2.18亿妇女未使用现代避孕方法(古特马赫研究所,2020年)。2016年,超过34亿人使用互联网(https://ourworldindata.org/internet 2016)。此外,发展中世界的互联网用户比美国和欧洲的互联网用户更频繁地使用社交媒体。在众多旨在加速计划生育进展的提议行动中,利用推特应是一个关键组成部分。在这篇评论中,我们描述了推特在一组选定的低收入和中等收入国家中的使用情况,这些国家已对计划生育2020倡议做出承诺(计划生育2020国家),并且有潜力利用推特与当前和潜在的计划生育用户进行互动。我们研究了八个关键计划生育2020国家的推特动态,并查看了其中大多数国家卫生部发布的推文内容。我们认为,在低收入和中等收入国家访问推特动态是可行且容易的。我们的观点基于当前和潜在用户及其合作伙伴以及卫生部在推特等公共论坛上讨论的生殖健康和计划生育术语类型。我们强调了两个值得感兴趣的利益相关者(包括政策制定者、项目设计者和健康倡导者)进行讨论的广泛考虑因素。第一个涉及在计划生育项目中使用推特,第二个涉及需要更深入研究的主题。数据与分析能力相结合将有助于政策制定者和项目设计者有效地利用推特来扩大计划生育服务的覆盖范围并影响社交媒体政策。我们的目标不仅是为知识体系做出贡献,还旨在促使项目人员、研究人员、健康倡导者和避孕用品使用者更积极地参与。