Author: Guo, Jiaâ€Wen; Sisler, Shawna M.; Wang, Chingâ€Yu; Wallace, Andrea S.
Title: Exploring experiences of COVIDâ€19â€positive individuals from social media posts Cord-id: 5om23d9y Document date: 2021_6_14
ID: 5om23d9y
Snippet: AIMS: This study aimed to explore the experience of individuals who claimed to be COVIDâ€19 positive via their Twitter feeds. BACKGROUND: Public social media data are valuable to understanding people's experiences of public health phenomena. To improve care to those with COVIDâ€19, this study explored themes from Twitter feeds, generated by individuals who selfâ€identified as COVIDâ€19 positive. DESIGN: This study utilized a descriptive design for text analysis for social media data. METHODS
Document: AIMS: This study aimed to explore the experience of individuals who claimed to be COVIDâ€19 positive via their Twitter feeds. BACKGROUND: Public social media data are valuable to understanding people's experiences of public health phenomena. To improve care to those with COVIDâ€19, this study explored themes from Twitter feeds, generated by individuals who selfâ€identified as COVIDâ€19 positive. DESIGN: This study utilized a descriptive design for text analysis for social media data. METHODS: This study analysed social media text retrieved by tweets of individuals in the United States who selfâ€reported being COVIDâ€19 positive and posted on Twitter in English between April 2, 2020, and April 24, 2020. In extracting embedded topics from tweets, we applied topic modelling approach based on latent Dirichlet allocation and visualized the results via LDAvis, a related webâ€based interactive visualization tool. RESULTS: Three themes were mined from 721 eligible tweets: (i) recognizing the seriousness of the condition in COVIDâ€19 pandemic; (ii) having symptoms of being COVIDâ€19 positive; and (iii) sharing the journey of being COVIDâ€19 positive. CONCLUSION: Leveraging the knowledge and context of study themes, we present experiences that may better reflect patient needs while experiencing COVIDâ€19. The findings offer more descriptive support for public health nursing and other translational public health efforts during a global pandemic.
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