Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis

BackgroundThe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic is considered to be the most daunting public health challenge in decades. With no effective treatments and with time needed to develop a vaccine, alternative approaches are being used to control this pandemic....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wahbeh, Abdullah, Nasralah, Tareq, Al-Ramahi, Mohammad, El-Gayar, Omar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-06-01
Series:JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
Online Access:http://publichealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e19276/
id doaj-d30c4398349345c0976599b36d115055
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d30c4398349345c0976599b36d1150552021-05-03T04:35:24ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Public Health and Surveillance2369-29602020-06-0162e1927610.2196/19276Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods AnalysisWahbeh, AbdullahNasralah, TareqAl-Ramahi, MohammadEl-Gayar, Omar BackgroundThe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic is considered to be the most daunting public health challenge in decades. With no effective treatments and with time needed to develop a vaccine, alternative approaches are being used to control this pandemic. ObjectiveThe objective of this paper was to identify topics, opinions, and recommendations about the COVID-19 pandemic discussed by medical professionals on the Twitter social medial platform. MethodsUsing a mixed methods approach blending the capabilities of social media analytics and qualitative analysis, we analyzed COVID-19–related tweets posted by medical professionals and examined their content. We used qualitative analysis to explore the collected data to identify relevant tweets and uncover important concepts about the pandemic using qualitative coding. Unsupervised and supervised machine learning techniques and text analysis were used to identify topics and opinions. ResultsData were collected from 119 medical professionals on Twitter about the coronavirus pandemic. A total of 10,096 English tweets were collected from the identified medical professionals between December 1, 2019 and April 1, 2020. We identified eight topics, namely actions and recommendations, fighting misinformation, information and knowledge, the health care system, symptoms and illness, immunity, testing, and infection and transmission. The tweets mainly focused on needed actions and recommendations (2827/10,096, 28%) to control the pandemic. Many tweets warned about misleading information (2019/10,096, 20%) that could lead to infection of more people with the virus. Other tweets discussed general knowledge and information (911/10,096, 9%) about the virus as well as concerns about the health care systems and workers (909/10,096, 9%). The remaining tweets discussed information about symptoms associated with COVID-19 (810/10,096, 8%), immunity (707/10,096, 7%), testing (605/10,096, 6%), and virus infection and transmission (503/10,096, 5%). ConclusionsOur findings indicate that Twitter and social media platforms can help identify important and useful knowledge shared by medical professionals during a pandemic.http://publichealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e19276/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wahbeh, Abdullah
Nasralah, Tareq
Al-Ramahi, Mohammad
El-Gayar, Omar
spellingShingle Wahbeh, Abdullah
Nasralah, Tareq
Al-Ramahi, Mohammad
El-Gayar, Omar
Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
author_facet Wahbeh, Abdullah
Nasralah, Tareq
Al-Ramahi, Mohammad
El-Gayar, Omar
author_sort Wahbeh, Abdullah
title Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
title_short Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
title_full Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
title_fullStr Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Mining Physicians’ Opinions on Social Media to Obtain Insights Into COVID-19: Mixed Methods Analysis
title_sort mining physicians’ opinions on social media to obtain insights into covid-19: mixed methods analysis
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
issn 2369-2960
publishDate 2020-06-01
description BackgroundThe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic is considered to be the most daunting public health challenge in decades. With no effective treatments and with time needed to develop a vaccine, alternative approaches are being used to control this pandemic. ObjectiveThe objective of this paper was to identify topics, opinions, and recommendations about the COVID-19 pandemic discussed by medical professionals on the Twitter social medial platform. MethodsUsing a mixed methods approach blending the capabilities of social media analytics and qualitative analysis, we analyzed COVID-19–related tweets posted by medical professionals and examined their content. We used qualitative analysis to explore the collected data to identify relevant tweets and uncover important concepts about the pandemic using qualitative coding. Unsupervised and supervised machine learning techniques and text analysis were used to identify topics and opinions. ResultsData were collected from 119 medical professionals on Twitter about the coronavirus pandemic. A total of 10,096 English tweets were collected from the identified medical professionals between December 1, 2019 and April 1, 2020. We identified eight topics, namely actions and recommendations, fighting misinformation, information and knowledge, the health care system, symptoms and illness, immunity, testing, and infection and transmission. The tweets mainly focused on needed actions and recommendations (2827/10,096, 28%) to control the pandemic. Many tweets warned about misleading information (2019/10,096, 20%) that could lead to infection of more people with the virus. Other tweets discussed general knowledge and information (911/10,096, 9%) about the virus as well as concerns about the health care systems and workers (909/10,096, 9%). The remaining tweets discussed information about symptoms associated with COVID-19 (810/10,096, 8%), immunity (707/10,096, 7%), testing (605/10,096, 6%), and virus infection and transmission (503/10,096, 5%). ConclusionsOur findings indicate that Twitter and social media platforms can help identify important and useful knowledge shared by medical professionals during a pandemic.
url http://publichealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e19276/
work_keys_str_mv AT wahbehabdullah miningphysiciansopinionsonsocialmediatoobtaininsightsintocovid19mixedmethodsanalysis
AT nasralahtareq miningphysiciansopinionsonsocialmediatoobtaininsightsintocovid19mixedmethodsanalysis
AT alramahimohammad miningphysiciansopinionsonsocialmediatoobtaininsightsintocovid19mixedmethodsanalysis
AT elgayaromar miningphysiciansopinionsonsocialmediatoobtaininsightsintocovid19mixedmethodsanalysis
_version_ 1721483906101805056