Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.

Using Twitter to implement public health awareness campaigns is on the rise, but campaign monitoring and evaluation are largely dependent on basic Twitter Analytics. To establish the potential of social network theory-based metrics in better understanding public health campaigns, we analyzed real-ti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sara Moukarzel, Martin Rehm, Anita Caduff, Miguel Del Fresno, Rafael Perez-Escamilla, Alan J Daly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249302
id doaj-56419866f38a46689ab957bd148779da
record_format Article
spelling doaj-56419866f38a46689ab957bd148779da2021-04-10T04:30:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01163e024930210.1371/journal.pone.0249302Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.Sara MoukarzelMartin RehmAnita CaduffMiguel Del FresnoRafael Perez-EscamillaAlan J DalyUsing Twitter to implement public health awareness campaigns is on the rise, but campaign monitoring and evaluation are largely dependent on basic Twitter Analytics. To establish the potential of social network theory-based metrics in better understanding public health campaigns, we analyzed real-time user interactions on Twitter during the 2020 World Breastfeeding Week (WBW) as an exemplar case. Social network analysis (SNA), including community and influencer identification, as well as topic modeling were used to compare the activity of n = 29,958 campaign participants and n = 10,694 reference users from the six-months pre-campaign period. Users formed more inter-connected relationships during the campaign, retweeting and mentioning each other 46,161 times compared to 10,662 times in the prior six months. Campaign participants formed identifiable communities that were not only based on their geolocation, but also based on interests and professional background. While influencers who dominated the WBW conversations were disproportionally members of the scientific community, the campaign did mobilize influencers from the general public who seemed to play a "bridging" role between the public and the scientific community. Users communicated about the campaign beyond its original themes to also discuss breastfeeding within the context of social and racial inequities. Applying SNA allowed understanding of the breastfeeding campaign's messaging and engagement dynamics across communities and influencers. Moving forward, WBW could benefit from improving targeting to enhance geographic coverage and user interactions. As this exemplar case indicates, social network theory and analysis can be used to inform other public health campaigns with data on user interactions that go beyond traditional metrics.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249302
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Moukarzel
Martin Rehm
Anita Caduff
Miguel Del Fresno
Rafael Perez-Escamilla
Alan J Daly
spellingShingle Sara Moukarzel
Martin Rehm
Anita Caduff
Miguel Del Fresno
Rafael Perez-Escamilla
Alan J Daly
Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sara Moukarzel
Martin Rehm
Anita Caduff
Miguel Del Fresno
Rafael Perez-Escamilla
Alan J Daly
author_sort Sara Moukarzel
title Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
title_short Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
title_full Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
title_fullStr Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Real-time Twitter interactions during World Breastfeeding Week: A case study and social network analysis.
title_sort real-time twitter interactions during world breastfeeding week: a case study and social network analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Using Twitter to implement public health awareness campaigns is on the rise, but campaign monitoring and evaluation are largely dependent on basic Twitter Analytics. To establish the potential of social network theory-based metrics in better understanding public health campaigns, we analyzed real-time user interactions on Twitter during the 2020 World Breastfeeding Week (WBW) as an exemplar case. Social network analysis (SNA), including community and influencer identification, as well as topic modeling were used to compare the activity of n = 29,958 campaign participants and n = 10,694 reference users from the six-months pre-campaign period. Users formed more inter-connected relationships during the campaign, retweeting and mentioning each other 46,161 times compared to 10,662 times in the prior six months. Campaign participants formed identifiable communities that were not only based on their geolocation, but also based on interests and professional background. While influencers who dominated the WBW conversations were disproportionally members of the scientific community, the campaign did mobilize influencers from the general public who seemed to play a "bridging" role between the public and the scientific community. Users communicated about the campaign beyond its original themes to also discuss breastfeeding within the context of social and racial inequities. Applying SNA allowed understanding of the breastfeeding campaign's messaging and engagement dynamics across communities and influencers. Moving forward, WBW could benefit from improving targeting to enhance geographic coverage and user interactions. As this exemplar case indicates, social network theory and analysis can be used to inform other public health campaigns with data on user interactions that go beyond traditional metrics.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249302
work_keys_str_mv AT saramoukarzel realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
AT martinrehm realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
AT anitacaduff realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
AT migueldelfresno realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
AT rafaelperezescamilla realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
AT alanjdaly realtimetwitterinteractionsduringworldbreastfeedingweekacasestudyandsocialnetworkanalysis
_version_ 1714684692205142016