Online Program

319216
HIV Stigma in Social Media: The Double-edged Sword of Information Dissemination


Monday, November 2, 2015 : 1:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.

Miriam Vega, Ph.D, AIDS Project of East Bay, Oakland, CA
Aaron Dabbah, MPA, America Online
Emily Klukas, MPH, Thailand
Background. While biomedical advances hold promise in reaching an AIDS-free generation, stigma and discrimination persist towards the HIV-infected and those at risk. Stigmatization may hinder efforts to screen, test, identify, and link HIV-positive individuals with care. Public sentiment and discrete emotions expressed through social media can be a driving force for stigmatization and should be examined.   

Methods. Sentiment analysis of 282,244 public stream Twitter referencing HIV/AIDS in a 23-day period that encompassed before, during and after the International AIDS Conference (IAC) 2012 was conducted.  This time period was specifically selected as this was the first time IAC was being held in the United States (since the US HIV travel ban was lifted) and social media coverage would presumably be extensive. Tweets were analyzed for polarity (positive, negative, neutral) using SENTIWORDNET and classified by seven stigma-related emotions (disgust, surprise, anger, shame, pride, happiness, amusement, sadness) based on machine-learning algorithms of psychometrically-validated text samples.  The sample was restricted to English-language tweets.

Results.  Results show Twitter is used extensively for public discourse on HIV/AIDS.  Overall, 34% of HIV-related messages were retweeted (indicating interest); of which 11% were retweeted more than 50 times. The overall polarity of messages was neutral, indicating information dissemination. However, the top three expressed emotions were: disgust, amusement, and anger-three emotions associated with stigmatization (Schweder, 1992). Expressed amusement correlated with negative polarity (r=.143, p=000), contained negative jokes/humor around HIV/AIDS and increased from 3.5% of the tweets pre-IAC to 5.2% post-IAC (X2 =772.38, p=.000).  Neutral tweets increased during IAC indicating usage of Twitter as a dissemination vehicle, however, expressed anger also increased during IAC (X2 =107.13, p=.000). A sub-analysis of anger-tweets showed two expressed-types: anger at HIV-positive individuals and “social-justice” anger.  Furthermore, anger was more readily retweeted than disgust or amusement. Very low numbers of tweets expressed internally-directed (shame, pride) emotions.

Conclusions.  The International AIDS Conference 2012 event did have an immediate and highly specific effect in public sphere expressions regarding HIV/AIDS.  Twitter can serve as a predictor of public sentiment and can be used to shape public discussions of HIV/AIDS. These results should be considered in light of how anti-stigma campaigns as well as intervention recruitment messages should be framed in order to continue to accelerate efforts to end AIDS.

Learning Areas:

Communication and informatics
Planning of health education strategies, interventions, and programs
Social and behavioral sciences

Learning Objectives:
Identify three key emotions associated with stigma Describe how stigma is manifested in social media such as twitter Explain the association between information dissemination and expressed anger

Keyword(s): Social Media, HIV Interventions

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been the principal investigator of multiple federally funded grants focusing on HIV prevention, capacity building assistance and communication strategies. Among my scientific interests has been the understanding of interpersonal and institutionalized stigma and its relationship to HIV risk behaviors. Have been involved in the development of ecologically valid interventions for men who have sex with men.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.