Social media engagement in health and climate change: an exploratory analysis of Twitter

Su Golder, Hilary Graham
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Abstract

Social media are increasingly used by the public to share information and opinions. This study explores social media engagement in health and climate change through an analysis of English-language posts on Twitter, one of the most widely-used platforms. We searched Twitter from 3rd April 2023 to 11th May 2023 for posts related to climate change using climate-related textwords and hashtags; we then used health keywords (‘health’, ‘wellbeing’, ‘illness’, ‘illnesses’, ‘disease’, ‘death’) to identify posts related to health. Focusing on posts from general public users, we investigated the proportion of climate change posts referring to health and, for a random sample of these tweets, undertook a content analysis to identify the ways in which climate change and health were represented. The content analysis drew on media research on ‘framing’, a selective process through which particular aspects of an issue – for example, its causes, impacts and solutions – are highlighted. 668,810 posts related to climate change were posted during the study period. Health-related textwords were included in 2.3% (15,434) of these posts. The content analysis pointed to two divergent frames. The first frame represents climate change as real, with real effects on people’s health. The second frame portrays climate change as a hoax, with hoax-generated health effects. While the ‘reality’ frame does not engage with the hoax frame, the latter provides an insistent counter-narrative that questions trust in mainstream science and government policy. Neither frame engages with people’s experiences of health and climate change. In conclusion, our study points to low levels of engagement in health in a key forum for public discussions about climate change. It also asks whether the failure of the ‘reality’ frame to engage either with people’s lived experiences or with hoax framings may be contributing to a polarised debate about climate change and health and hindering consensus-building.
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社交媒体参与健康和气候变化:对 Twitter 的探索性分析
公众越来越多地使用社交媒体来分享信息和意见。本研究通过分析 Twitter(使用最广泛的平台之一)上的英文帖子,探讨社交媒体在健康和气候变化方面的参与情况。从 2023 年 4 月 3 日至 2023 年 5 月 11 日,我们使用与气候相关的文本词和标签在 Twitter 上搜索与气候变化相关的帖子;然后使用健康关键词("健康"、"福祉"、"疾病"、"疾病"、"疾病"、"死亡")来识别与健康相关的帖子。以普通公众用户的帖子为重点,我们调查了提及健康的气候变化帖子的比例,并对这些推文的随机样本进行了内容分析,以确定气候变化和健康的表现方式。内容分析借鉴了媒体对 "框架 "的研究,"框架 "是一个有选择性的过程,通过这个过程,一个问题的特定方面--例如,其原因、影响和解决方案--得到了强调。在研究期间,共发布了 668,810 条与气候变化相关的帖子。其中2.3%(15,434条)的帖子包含了与健康相关的文字词。内容分析指出了两种不同的框架。第一种框架认为气候变化是真实存在的,对人们的健康有实际影响。第二种框架将气候变化描绘成一个骗局,由骗局产生健康影响。现实 "框架与 "骗局 "框架并不冲突,而后者则提供了一种坚持不懈的反叙述,质疑人们对主流科学和政府政策的信任。这两种框架都没有涉及人们对健康和气候变化的体验。总之,我们的研究表明,在公众讨论气候变化的重要论坛上,人们对健康问题的参与程度很低。研究还提出了一个问题:"现实 "框架未能与人们的生活经验或骗局框架相结合,是否会导致有关气候变化和健康的辩论两极分化,并阻碍达成共识?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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