Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities

BackgroundLimited research has examined the health and social needs of transgender and gender nonconforming populations. Due to high levels of stigma, transgender individuals may avoid disclosing their identities to researchers, hindering this type of work. Further, researche...

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Main Authors: Krueger, Evan A, Young, Sean D
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-05-01
Series:JMIR Mental Health
Online Access:http://mental.jmir.org/2015/2/e16/
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spelling doaj-94a806d3fc2a484e8ae633a643400a872021-05-03T04:35:26ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Mental Health2368-79592015-05-0122e1610.2196/mental.4113Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender CommunitiesKrueger, Evan AYoung, Sean D BackgroundLimited research has examined the health and social needs of transgender and gender nonconforming populations. Due to high levels of stigma, transgender individuals may avoid disclosing their identities to researchers, hindering this type of work. Further, researchers have traditionally relied on clinic-based sampling methods, which may mask the true heterogeneity of transgender and gender nonconforming communities. Online social networking websites present a novel platform for studying this diverse, difficult-to-reach population. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to attempt to examine the perceived health and social needs of transgender and gender nonconforming communities by examining messages posted to the popular microblogging platform, Twitter. MethodsTweets were collected from 13 transgender-related hashtags on July 11, 2014. They were read and coded according to general themes addressed, and a content analysis was performed. Qualitative and descriptive statistics are presented. ResultsThere were 1135 tweets that were collected in total. Both “positive” and “negative” events were discussed, in both personal and social contexts. Violence, discrimination, suicide, and sexual risk behavior were discussed. There were 34.36% (390/1135) of tweets that addressed transgender-relevant current events, and 60.79% (690/1135) provided a link to a relevant news article or resource. ConclusionsThis study found that transgender individuals and allies use Twitter to discuss health and social needs relevant to the population. Real-time social media sites like Twitter can be used to study issues relevant to transgender communities.http://mental.jmir.org/2015/2/e16/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Krueger, Evan A
Young, Sean D
spellingShingle Krueger, Evan A
Young, Sean D
Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
JMIR Mental Health
author_facet Krueger, Evan A
Young, Sean D
author_sort Krueger, Evan A
title Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
title_short Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
title_full Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
title_fullStr Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
title_full_unstemmed Twitter: A Novel Tool for Studying the Health and Social Needs of Transgender Communities
title_sort twitter: a novel tool for studying the health and social needs of transgender communities
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Mental Health
issn 2368-7959
publishDate 2015-05-01
description BackgroundLimited research has examined the health and social needs of transgender and gender nonconforming populations. Due to high levels of stigma, transgender individuals may avoid disclosing their identities to researchers, hindering this type of work. Further, researchers have traditionally relied on clinic-based sampling methods, which may mask the true heterogeneity of transgender and gender nonconforming communities. Online social networking websites present a novel platform for studying this diverse, difficult-to-reach population. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to attempt to examine the perceived health and social needs of transgender and gender nonconforming communities by examining messages posted to the popular microblogging platform, Twitter. MethodsTweets were collected from 13 transgender-related hashtags on July 11, 2014. They were read and coded according to general themes addressed, and a content analysis was performed. Qualitative and descriptive statistics are presented. ResultsThere were 1135 tweets that were collected in total. Both “positive” and “negative” events were discussed, in both personal and social contexts. Violence, discrimination, suicide, and sexual risk behavior were discussed. There were 34.36% (390/1135) of tweets that addressed transgender-relevant current events, and 60.79% (690/1135) provided a link to a relevant news article or resource. ConclusionsThis study found that transgender individuals and allies use Twitter to discuss health and social needs relevant to the population. Real-time social media sites like Twitter can be used to study issues relevant to transgender communities.
url http://mental.jmir.org/2015/2/e16/
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