Spanish Facebook Posts as an Indicator of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in Texas
Vaccination represents a major public health intervention intended to protect against COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations. However, vaccine hesitancy due to misinformation/disinformation, especially among ethnic minority groups, negatively impacts the effectiveness of such an intervention. The...
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Zusammenfassung: | Vaccination represents a major public health intervention intended to protect
against COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations. However, vaccine hesitancy
due to misinformation/disinformation, especially among ethnic minority groups,
negatively impacts the effectiveness of such an intervention. The aim of the
study is to provide an understanding of how information gleaned from social
media can be used to improve attitudes towards vaccination and decrease vaccine
hesitancy. This work focused on Spanish-language posts and will highlight the
relationship between vaccination rates across different Texas counties and the
sentiment and emotional content of Facebook data, the most popular platform
among the Hispanic population. The analysis of this valuable dataset indicates
that vaccination rates among this minority group are negatively correlated with
negative sentiment and fear, meaning that the higher prevalence of negative and
fearful posts reveals lower vaccination rates in these counties. This first
study investigating vaccine hesitancy in the Hispanic population suggests that
social media listening can be a valuable tool for measuring attitudes toward
public health interventions. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2209.04975 |