| Literature DB >> 27227151 |
John W Ayers1, J Lee Westmaas2, Eric C Leas3, Adrian Benton4, Yunqi Chen5, Mark Dredze4, Benjamin M Althouse6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Awareness campaigns are ubiquitous, but little is known about their potential effectiveness because traditional evaluations are often unfeasible. For 40 years, the "Great American Smokeout" (GASO) has encouraged media coverage and popular engagement with smoking cessation on the third Thursday of November as the nation's longest running awareness campaign.Entities:
Keywords: big data; evaluation; health communication; infodemiology; infoveillence; mass media; smoking cessation; social media; tobacco control; twitter
Year: 2016 PMID: 27227151 PMCID: PMC4869240 DOI: 10.2196/publichealth.5304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Big data codebook.
| Type | Source | Description | Privacy | Aim |
| News coverage | News Library [ | Includes news articles from 5689 US newspapers. Described as “virtually all” US newspapers. | All publicly available data. Complete text not available for some papers behind pay walls. | To evaluate how frequently the primary GASO message was carried by news media. |
| Social media | Twitter [ | Includes either samples of all tweets or all tweets for specific keywords/phrases on the global Twitter platform. | Derived from public tweets (excluding direct messages or tweets marked “private”). Includes username and location for users sharing their location. | To evaluate how frequently cessation-related tweets were shared on social media (a secondary aim of the GASO). |
| Internet searches | Google [ | Includes global search trends for investigator-selected keywords or phrases. | Derived from private search activity on Google. Disaggregated to city, national, or global units without any identifying information to protect privacy. | To evaluate how the GASO motivated some to engage in behavior change by seeking out additional information on cessation. |
| Information retrieval | Wikipedia [ | Includes counts of all Wikipedia page visits. Aggregated by language, but unable to aggregate by location. | Derived from private online activity. Disaggregated to preserve privacy. | To evaluate how the GASO motivated specific information retrieval on the most popular cessation resource. |
| Quitline calls | Sourced privately, covering 29 US states. Additional states are only available from other providers or state representatives. | Includes call language, frequency, and duration to US state-sponsored quitlines. | Derived from privately obtained calls. Data were aggregated nationally to protect privacy. | To evaluate how the GASO motivated some smokers to engage in quit counseling. |
Figure 1Trends in all outcome measures (news volume, Tweets, Google searches, Wikipedia article views, and quitline call volume, top to bottom panels) across the entire study period (2009-2014). Gray lines indicate GASO (dashed lines) and New Years Day (NYD, dotted lines). The right panels display the same data focused around the days before and after the GASO for each year of the study period.
Figure 2Percent increases in outcomes on the GASO compared to the counterfactual had the GASO not occurred, as detailed in the text. Asterisks indicate statistical significance (P<.05).
Figure 3Relationships between increases in cessation-related news media and help-seeking online (Google and Wikipedia) and on quitlines. Each circle captures the co-occurring annual mean effect estimate for the outcomes as displayed on the (y) and (x) axis, with a plotted line and confidence interval as derived from a linear regression. The slope of the dashed reference line indicates a perfect one-to-one relationship between the outcomes.