| Literature DB >> 32260048 |
Cristina M Pulido1, Laura Ruiz-Eugenio2, Gisela Redondo-Sama3, Beatriz Villarejo-Carballido4.
Abstract
One of the challenges today is to face fake news (false information) in health due to its potential impact on people's lives. This article contributes to a new application of social impact in social media (SISM) methodology. This study focuses on the social impact of the research to identify what type of health information is false and what type of information is evidence of the social impact shared in social media. The analysis of social media includes Reddit, Facebook, and Twitter. This analysis contributes to identifying how interactions in these forms of social media depend on the type of information shared. The results indicate that messages focused on fake health information are mostly aggressive, those based on evidence of social impact are respectful and transformative, and finally, deliberation contexts promoted in social media overcome false information about health. These results contribute to advancing knowledge in overcoming fake health-related news shared in social media.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola; fake news; nutrition; public health; social impact in social media; social media analysis; vaccines
Year: 2020 PMID: 32260048 PMCID: PMC7177765 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Social media data were collected.
| Social Media | Keyword | Data Collected |
|---|---|---|
| #vaccines | 12,965 tweets | |
| #nutrition | 200 tweets | |
| #Ebola | 4052 tweets | |
| Facebook Page 1 | 100 posts and 10,118 corresponding comments | |
| Facebook Page 2 | 100 posts and corresponding 2958 comments | |
| Subreddit community | 4 conversations on vaccines with 55 comments | |
| AskScience Ama Series | A conversation with experts on vaccines with 342 comments |
Final sample selected for the social impact in social media (SISM) analysis.
| Social Media | Keyword | Data Selected |
|---|---|---|
| #vaccines | 100 tweets | |
| #nutrition | 100 tweets | |
| #Ebola | 100 tweets | |
| Facebook Page 1 | 20 posts and 20 comments | |
| Facebook Page 2 | 20 posts and 20 comments | |
| Subreddit community | 4 conversations on vaccines with 4 open comments in the last 48 comments | |
| AskScience Ama Series | 1 Ask Ama Series with 1 open comment in the last 20 comments |
Codebook.
| Classification | |
|---|---|
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| ESISM | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) is an example of evidence of the social impact shared in social media. This means that there is evidence of improvement in relation to the topic selected. This evidence could be a potential or real social impact of research results that is linked with societal goals, for instance, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and that contributes to improving the specific health issue concerned. This information is useful in connecting citizens with trustworthy information. The message offers a link to evidence of contrasting information or sources of the evidence with possible contrasts. |
| MISFA | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) is an example of misinformation or fake information in health. Both situations have negative consequences for public health and personal health. It does not offer a contribution in order to contrast but rather presents the message as evidence or trust information, or the source of the information offered is not scientific. |
| OPINION | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) is an opinion, and the message is presented as opinion, not as evidence. |
| INFO | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) is an event or fact, for instance, news. |
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| ESISM D | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) is formulated as a question to ask for evidence of scientific results that ensure social impact or that are a starting point for deliberation. |
| MISFA D | The message (tweet, Facebook posts or Reddit messages) contains misinformation or fake information, but it contains questions that open dialogue in order to contrast one’s own assumptions with the scientific evidence delivered by other persons or to begin a deliberation. |
Percentage of coded messages in relation to data collected by each social media channel selected.
| Social Media | ESISM | INFO | MISFA | OPINION |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Twitter #Ebola | 39% | 51% | 3% | 7% |
| Twitter #nutrition | 18% | 51% | 21% | 10% |
| Twitter #vaccines | 4% | 35% | 32% | 29% |
| Facebook page 1 (posts and comments) | 15% | 48% | 5% | 33% |
| Facebook page 2 (post and comments) | 0% | 43% | 3% | 55% |
| Subreddit conversations | 27% | 37% | 6% | 31% |
| AskScience Ama Series | 14% | 62% | 10% | 14% |
SICOR.
| Social Media | SICOR—Social Impact Coverage Ratio |
|---|---|
| Tweets | 20% |
| Facebook posts and comments | 8% |
| Subreddit comments | 23% |
Percentage of MISFA for each social media channel selected.
| Social Media | MISFA (Misinformation and Fake Health Information) |
|---|---|
| Tweets | 19% |
| Facebook posts and comments | 4% |
| Subreddit comments | 7% |