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Tweets, retweets and public health messaging: How health departments engage the public in obesity prevention
Methods: Nearly 250 SHD/LHDs with both Twitter and Facebook accounts were identified. Using the qualitative analysis software NVivo and its NCapture feature, 193,360 tweets from these health departments were captured and their content evaluated. The content was analyzed using stem-word searches for 95 obesity-related keywords and grouped under four broad topics. Frequency of tweets by topic and references to public health campaigns were obtained. The proportion of original tweets was compared to retweets and their sources were determined.
Results: Three-quarters of all identified SHDs used Twitter/Facebook, with all Midwestern SHDs using it but only about half of western SHDs doing so. Almost all identified SHDs and two-thirds of identified LHDs tweeted about obesity topics. Original content was disseminated approximately 65% of the time. Most common sources of retweeted material were national (CDC, ASTHO, RWJ) but also local (NYC Department of Health).
Conclusion: Use of social media by SHD/LHDs for health promotion is relatively new, but understanding how it is being used may help late adopters to see its utility in reaching a broad spectrum of their populations.
Learning Areas:
Communication and informaticsPublic health or related education
Learning Objectives:
Describe the five most common obesity-related topics that SHD/LHDs are most likely to use social media to promote
Compare frequency of original vs. retweeted content for obesity-related messages
Describe the top 20 sources that health departments use when retweeting obesity-related messages
Compare State and LHD frequencies of obesity-related messaging
Keyword(s): Social Media, Obesity
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I helped design, implement and analyze the data from the study. As a Health Educator at a public health department I have been responsible for the social media messaging for our county.
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.