| Literature DB >> 35462735 |
Ranganathan Chandrasekaran1, Rashi Desai1, Harsh Shah1, Vivek Kumar1, Evangelos Moustakas2.
Abstract
Background: A global rollout of vaccinations is currently underway to mitigate and protect people from the COVID-19 pandemic. Several individuals have been using social media platforms such as Twitter as an outlet to express their feelings, concerns, and opinions about COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination programs. This study examined COVID-19 vaccine-related tweets from January 1, 2020, to April 30, 2021, to uncover the topics, themes, and variations in sentiments of public Twitter users. Objective: The aim of this study was to examine key themes and topics from COVID-19 vaccine-related English tweets posted by individuals, and to explore the trends and variations in public opinions and sentiments.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Twitter study; content analysis; coronavirus; infoveillance; sentiment analysis; social media; text mining; topic modeling; tweets; vaccination
Year: 2022 PMID: 35462735 PMCID: PMC9014796 DOI: 10.2196/33909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Infodemiology ISSN: 2564-1891
Summary of key studies on COVID-19 vaccines using social media data.
| Source | Data set | Time period | Key findings | Limitations/remarks |
| Yin et al [ | 1.75 million Weibo messages from China | January to October 2020 | Identified public opinions pertaining to pricing, side effects, and inactivated vaccines | Restricted to Chinese-speaking Weibo users, including residents of China and those living abroad. The study used posts from verified users. |
| Hussain et al [ | 23,571 Facebook posts from the United Kingdom and 144,864 from the United States; 40,268 tweets from the United Kingdom and 98,385 from the United States | March 1 to November 22, 2020 | Overall averaged positive, negative, and neutral sentiments were at 58%, 22%, and 17% in the United Kingdom, in contrast to 56%, 24%, and 18% in the United States, respectively. Public optimism regarding vaccine development, effectiveness, clinical trials, concerns over their safety, economic viability, and corporation control were identified. | Geographical scope included the United Kingdom and the United States. The study does not mention excluding tweets made by organizations and news outlets. |
| Guntuku et al [ | 4 million tweets originating from 2957 US counties | December 1, 2020, to February 28, 2021 | Topics identified include side effects, conspiracy theories, trust issues in the US health care system in December 2020; mask wearing, herd immunity, natural infection, and concerns about nursing home residents and workers in January 2021; and access to black communities, vaccine appointments, family safety, and online misinformation campaigns in February 2021. Geographic variations on the topics across different counties were also identified. | Geographical scope was restricted to the United States. The study does not mention excluding tweets made by organizations and news outlets. |
| Bonnevie et al [ | 1,438,251 tweets; 6498 per day | Antivaccine tweets from February 15, 2020, to June 14, 2020, as compared to those in the pre-COVID-19 period of October 15, 2019, to February 14, 2020 | Mentions of vaccine opposition increased by 79.9%. The themes identified were negative health impacts, pharmaceutical industry, policies and politics, vaccine ingredients, federal health authorities, research and clinical trials, religion, vaccine safety, disease prevalence, school, and family | No mention of exclusion of tweets made by organizations and news outlets |
| Griffith et al [ | 3915 tweets about vaccine hesitancy from Canada | December 10, 2020, to December 23, 2020 | Vaccine hesitancy was attributed to the following themes: concerns over safety, suspicion about political or economic forces driving the COVID-19 pandemic or vaccine development, a lack of knowledge about the vaccine, antivaccine or confusing messages from authority figures, and a lack of legal liability from vaccine companies | Geographical scope restricted to Canada, with limited sample size; manual coding of tweets |
| Hou et al [ | 7032 tweets and Weibo posts from five locations: New York, London, Mumbai, Sao Paulo, and Beijing | June and July 2020 | Beijing users (76.8%) had a higher vaccine acceptance rate as compared to those in New York (36.4%). Concerns expressed included: vaccine safety, distrust in governments and experts, widespread misinformation, vaccine production and supply, vaccine distribution, and inequity | Manual coding of tweets and Weibo posts from five locations, with limited sample size. However, this study excluded posts from news outlets and organizational accounts |
| Yousefinaghani et al [ | 4,552,652 tweets about COVID-19 vaccines | January 2020 to January 2021 | Sentiment analysis revealed positive being the dominant polarity and having higher engagement. Themes among the positive-sentiment tweets were happiness and hope, support, and religion. Themes among the negative-sentiment tweets were fear and frustration, disappointment, anger, and politics. More discussion on vaccine rejection and hesitancy as compared to provaccine themes | Examined tweets from six countries: the United States, the United Kingdom India, Australia, Canada, and Ireland. No mention of excluding organizational tweets. |
| Hu et al [ | 308,755 geo-coded tweets from the United States | March 1, 2020, to February 28, 2021 | Identified three phases along the pandemic timeline and documented changes in public sentiments and emotions. An increase in positive sentiment coupled with a decrease in negative sentiment concerning vaccines were noted in most states. Major international or social events and announcements by influential leaders or authorities associated with changes in public opinions toward vaccines. | Geographical scope restricted to the United States. No mention of excluding organizational tweets |
| Lyu et al [ | 1,499,421 tweets | March 11, 2020, to January 31, 2021 | 16 topics under five broad themes were identified: opinions and emotions around vaccines and vaccination, knowledge around vaccines and vaccination, vaccines as a global issue, vaccine administration, and progress on vaccine development and authorization | Did not exclude organizational tweets, but eliminated tweets by bots and fake accounts |
| Eibensteiner et al [ | Poll of 3439 Twitter users | February 12, 2021, and February 19, 2021 | 45.9% of Twitter users felt the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines to be adequate; over 82.8% responded affirmatively about taking the vaccination | Used an anonymized polling/survey method with a limited sample of Twitter users |
Figure 1Proportion of COVID-19 vaccine–related tweets from January to April 2021.
Topics and broad themes underlying COVID-19 vaccine–related tweets (N=2,944,530).
| Themes and topics | Tweets, n (%) | |
|
| 508,658 (17.27) | |
|
| Vaccination disclosure | 201,102 (6.83) |
|
| Postvaccination symptoms and effects | 307,556 (10.44) |
|
| 462,529 (15.71) | |
|
| Vaccine efficacy | 139,280 (4.73) |
|
| Clinical trials, approvals, and suspensions | 182,673 (6.20) |
|
| Vaccine distribution and shortage | 140,576 (4.77) |
|
| 630,606 (21.42) | |
|
| Vaccine affordability | 116,205 (3.95) |
|
| Regulation: mandatory versus optional | 410,466 (13.94) |
|
| Travel | 103,935 (3.53) |
|
| 176,329 (5.99) | |
|
| Vaccination appointment and scheduling | 105,586 (3.59) |
|
| Vaccination sites | 70,743 (2.40) |
|
| 1,093,050 (37.12) | |
|
| Vaccination eligibility and policies | 76,605 (2.60) |
|
| Vaccination promotion and advocacy | 264,368 (8.98) |
|
| Vaccination hesitancy | 371,843 (12.63) |
|
| Opinion leaders and endorsement | 172,002 (5.84) |
|
| Hoax/conspiracy | 208,232 (7.07) |
| Gratitude toward health care workers | 73,358 (2.49) | |
Figure 2Proportions of positive, negative, and neutral tweets about COVID-19 vaccination.