| Literature DB >> 36196144 |
Mengke Hu1, Mike Conway1,2,3.
Abstract
Background: Since COVID-19 was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization on March 11, 2020, the disease has had an unprecedented impact worldwide. Social media such as Reddit can serve as a resource for enhancing situational awareness, particularly regarding monitoring public attitudes and behavior during the crisis. Insights gained can then be utilized to better understand public attitudes and behaviors during the COVID-19 crisis, and to support communication and health-promotion messaging. Objective: The aim of this study was to compare public attitudes toward the 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic across four predominantly English-speaking countries (the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia) using data derived from the social media platform Reddit.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Reddit; natural language processing; social media
Year: 2022 PMID: 36196144 PMCID: PMC9521381 DOI: 10.2196/36941
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Infodemiology ISSN: 2564-1891
Subreddit information on July 31, 2021.
| Country | Subreddit | Number of members | Date subreddit created |
| United Kingdom |
| 92,600 | February 11, 2020 |
| United States |
| 141,000 | February 12, 2020 |
| Canada |
| 9000 | February 12, 2020 |
| Canada |
| 67,300 | March 1, 2020 |
| Australia |
| 10,800 | February 21, 2020 |
| Australia |
| 90,300 | February 23, 2020 |
Figure 1Procedure for topic training and mapping to the common topic categories.
Consolidated topics common across all four countries.
| Common topic | Topics |
| COVID Impact | work, finance, education, travel restriction, social distancing |
| COVID Prevention | mask wearing, hand washing, transmission risk |
| Case Report | case report, report of interaction with hospital |
| Policy & News | policy announcement, news, question and answer |
Reddit COVID-19 data from February 2020 to November 2020.
| Country data set | Subreddit | Unique users, n | Submissions, n |
| United Kingdom | r/CoronavirusUK | 20,482 | 17,350 |
| United States | r/coronavirusus | 55,380 | 35,885 |
| Canada | r/CoronavirusCanada | 4061 | 4625 |
| Canada | r/CanadaCoronavirus | 10,420 | 9670 |
| Australia | r/CoronavirusAustralia | 3114 | 2359 |
| Australia | r/CoronavirusDownunder | 15,537 | 14,340 |
Figure 2Post and user volume by week (log scale).
Manually selected topic models for the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, and the associated document-topic thresholds.
| Country | Chosen model | Threshold for document-topics |
| United States | 15-topics model | 0.19881 |
| United Kingdom | 10-topics mode | 0.24 |
| Canada | 15-topics model | 0.15864215 |
| Australia | 10-topics model | 0.18434 |
Figure 3Topic proportions for the United States (US), the United Kingdom (UK), Canada (CAN), and Australia (AUS).
Figure 4Topic weekly trend for (A) the United States, (B) Australia, (C) Canada, and (D) the United Kingdom. Higher-resolution version of this figure is available in Multimedia Appendix 2.
Timeline of COVID-19 lockdown events in 2020 [62].
| Date | Event |
| March 11 | United Kingdom lockdown; United States announces level 3 travel advisory |
| March 18 | United States and Canada suspend nonessential travel between the two countries |
| March 23 | United Kingdom lockdown |
| March 24 | Australia bans all overseas travel |
| April 18 | United States: protests of the country’s lockdown |
| June 24 | United States: increase in case rates in 26 states since easing lockdown restrictions |
| July 3 | United Kingdom announces an end to travel restrictions except for the United States |
| July 4 | Melbourne, Australia tightens restrictions on 12 suburbs |
| September 5 | Australia extends its hard lockdown until the end of September |
| October 12 | United Kingdom announces new lockdown rules |