335110
Early Epidemic Detection of Ebola through Tweet Analysis: Nigeria as a case study
Methods: During Ebola outbreak from July 24th to August 1st, 2014, tweets were collected regarding Ebola. Keywords of related data included # #EbolaVirus, #EbolaFacts. Data elements collected for tweets included contents, time stamps, latitude and longitude codes. Twitter communication was examined through natural language processing and time series analysis.
Results: Tweets steadily increased (six-fold posted and twenty-fold disseminated) from July 24th until July 31st. The first probable case announced by the Nigerian Ministry of Health was July 27th . Tweets increased three to seven days prior to the official CDC announcement on July 31st. Twitter users discussed the first case in tweets such as“#EbolaVirus 1st case discovered Lagos, pls spread the word”. Ebola news was first tweeted on July 24th and reached 1,196,793 with 120,574,549 reached on July 30th, a hundred-fold increase.
Conclusion: Our results demonstrates the effective use of social media in public health outbreak surveillance. We have also demonstrated that although Twitter adoption and use in resource-limited settings is lagging, an observed increase in the frequency of Ebola-related tweets shows its usefulness. SNS tools such as Twitter can support surveillance efforts in resource limited settings.
Learning Areas:
EpidemiologyPublic health or related research
Learning Objectives:
Describe the use of Twitter during the current Ebola outbreak in early detection and surveillance for Nigeria.
Keyword(s): Data Collection and Surveillance, Social Media
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been a scientist in infectious disease for several years. I have worked in infectious disease areas including HIV/AIDS and immunizations and currently Ebola. I hold degrees in Nursing and Public Health.
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.