Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.

<h4>Background</h4>Media reporting on communicable diseases has been demonstrated to affect the perception of the public. Communicable disease reporting related to foreign-born persons has not yet been evaluated.<h4>Objective</h4>Examine how political leaning in the media aff...

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Main Authors: Angel N Desai, Shravanthi M Seshasayee, Maimuna S Majumder, Britta Lassmann, Lawrence C Madoff, Emily L Cohn, John S Brownstein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230967
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spelling doaj-1033b28f5ee94ab594e7c4b88d58688a2021-03-28T04:30:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01154e023096710.1371/journal.pone.0230967Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.Angel N DesaiShravanthi M SeshasayeeMaimuna S MajumderBritta LassmannLawrence C MadoffEmily L CohnJohn S Brownstein<h4>Background</h4>Media reporting on communicable diseases has been demonstrated to affect the perception of the public. Communicable disease reporting related to foreign-born persons has not yet been evaluated.<h4>Objective</h4>Examine how political leaning in the media affects reporting on tuberculosis (TB) in foreign-born persons.<h4>Methods</h4>HealthMap, a digital surveillance platform that aggregates news sources on global infectious diseases, was used. Data was queried for media reports from the U.S. between 2011-2019, containing the term "TB" or "tuberculosis" and "foreign born", "refugee (s)," or "im (migrants)." Reports were reviewed to exclude duplicates and non-human cases. Each media source was rated using two independent media bias indicators to assess political leaning. Forty-six non-tuberculosis reports were randomly sampled and evaluated as a control. Two independent reviewers performed sentiment analysis on each report.<h4>Results</h4>Of 891 TB-associated reports in the US, 46 referenced foreign-born individuals, and were included in this analysis. 60.9% (28) of reports were published in right-leaning news media and 6.5% (3) of reports in left-leaning media, while 39.1% (18) of the control group reports were published in left- leaning media and 10.9% (5) in right-leaning media (p < .001). 43% (20) of all study reports were posted in 2016. Sentiment analysis revealed that right-leaning reports often portrayed foreign-born persons negatively.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Preliminary data from this pilot suggest that political leaning may affect reporting on TB in US foreign-born populations. Right-leaning news organizations produced the most reports on TB, and the majority of these reports portrayed foreign-born persons negatively. In addition, the control group comprised of non-TB, non-foreign born reports on communicable diseases featured a higher percentage of left-leaning news outlets, suggesting that reporting on TB in foreign-born individuals may be of greater interest to right-leaning outlets. Further investigation both in the U.S. and globally is needed.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230967
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angel N Desai
Shravanthi M Seshasayee
Maimuna S Majumder
Britta Lassmann
Lawrence C Madoff
Emily L Cohn
John S Brownstein
spellingShingle Angel N Desai
Shravanthi M Seshasayee
Maimuna S Majumder
Britta Lassmann
Lawrence C Madoff
Emily L Cohn
John S Brownstein
Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Angel N Desai
Shravanthi M Seshasayee
Maimuna S Majumder
Britta Lassmann
Lawrence C Madoff
Emily L Cohn
John S Brownstein
author_sort Angel N Desai
title Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
title_short Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
title_full Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
title_fullStr Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
title_full_unstemmed Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
title_sort tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the united states: a mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description <h4>Background</h4>Media reporting on communicable diseases has been demonstrated to affect the perception of the public. Communicable disease reporting related to foreign-born persons has not yet been evaluated.<h4>Objective</h4>Examine how political leaning in the media affects reporting on tuberculosis (TB) in foreign-born persons.<h4>Methods</h4>HealthMap, a digital surveillance platform that aggregates news sources on global infectious diseases, was used. Data was queried for media reports from the U.S. between 2011-2019, containing the term "TB" or "tuberculosis" and "foreign born", "refugee (s)," or "im (migrants)." Reports were reviewed to exclude duplicates and non-human cases. Each media source was rated using two independent media bias indicators to assess political leaning. Forty-six non-tuberculosis reports were randomly sampled and evaluated as a control. Two independent reviewers performed sentiment analysis on each report.<h4>Results</h4>Of 891 TB-associated reports in the US, 46 referenced foreign-born individuals, and were included in this analysis. 60.9% (28) of reports were published in right-leaning news media and 6.5% (3) of reports in left-leaning media, while 39.1% (18) of the control group reports were published in left- leaning media and 10.9% (5) in right-leaning media (p < .001). 43% (20) of all study reports were posted in 2016. Sentiment analysis revealed that right-leaning reports often portrayed foreign-born persons negatively.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Preliminary data from this pilot suggest that political leaning may affect reporting on TB in US foreign-born populations. Right-leaning news organizations produced the most reports on TB, and the majority of these reports portrayed foreign-born persons negatively. In addition, the control group comprised of non-TB, non-foreign born reports on communicable diseases featured a higher percentage of left-leaning news outlets, suggesting that reporting on TB in foreign-born individuals may be of greater interest to right-leaning outlets. Further investigation both in the U.S. and globally is needed.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230967
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