APA
Herrera Peco, Ivan & Jiménez Gómez, Beatriz & Peña Deudero, Juan José & Benitez de Gracia, Elvira & Ruiz Núñez, Carlos .Healthcare Professionals¿ Role in Social Media Public Health Campaigns: Analysis of Spanish Pro Vaccination Campaign on Twitter.
ISO 690
Herrera Peco, Ivan & Jiménez Gómez, Beatriz & Peña Deudero, Juan José & Benitez de Gracia, Elvira & Ruiz Núñez, Carlos. Healthcare Professionals¿ Role in Social Media Public Health Campaigns: Analysis of Spanish Pro Vaccination Campaign on Twitter.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/24574
Résumé:
The COVID-19 pandemic has generated a great impact worldwide both on the population
health but also on an economic and social level. In this health emergency, a key element has been and
still is the need for information, which has become a daily concern for many people. Social media
represent powerful tools for searching and gathering health-related information, thus becoming a
new place where health authorities need to be present to disseminate information of preventive
measures like vaccines against COVID-19, as well as try to block information against these public
health measures. The main goal of this study was to analyze the role that healthcare professionals
have in Twitter to support the campaign of public institutions on vaccination against COVID-19. To
address this study, an analysis of the messages sent on Twitter containing the hashtag #yomevacuno,
between 12 December 2020 was developed using the NodeXL software (Social Media Research
Foundation, Redwood, CA, USA), focusing on content analysis of tweets and users¿ accounts to
identify healthcare professionals. The results show that healthcare professionals represent only
11.38% of users, being responsible for 6.35% of impressions generated by the network #yomevacuno.
We can observe that traffic information generated by healthcare professionals is not significant in
comparison with institutions (p = 0.633), but it is compared to common users (p = 0.0014). The most
active healthcare professionals were pharmacists (40.17%), nurses (27.17%), and physicians (12.14%).
Their activity (90.43% of messages) was mainly focused on sharing messages generated by other
users¿ accounts. From original content generated by healthcare professionals, only 78.95% had a
favorable storytelling on the vaccine, but without sharing information about vaccines or vaccination.
As a conclusion for this study, the participation of healthcare professionals in the dissemination
and generation of information within the #yomevacuno communication strategy, led by the Spanish
Ministry of Health, has been scarce. We emphasize the need to enhance communication skills in social
networks to support public health campaigns through these increasingly important social media.
Keywords: COVID-19; healthcare professionals; public health; vaccines; social media