Use of #SaludTues Tweetchats for the Dissemination of Culturally Relevant Information on Latino Health Equity: Exploratory Case Study.


Journal

JMIR public health and surveillance
ISSN: 2369-2960
Titre abrégé: JMIR Public Health Surveill
Pays: Canada
ID NLM: 101669345

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 03 2021
Historique:
received: 10 06 2020
accepted: 31 12 2020
revised: 18 09 2020
entrez: 1 3 2021
pubmed: 2 3 2021
medline: 14 9 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Latinx people comprise 18% of the US adult population and a large share of youth and continue to experience inequities that perpetuate health disparities. To engage Latinx people in advocacy for health equity based on this population's heavy share of smartphone, social media, and Twitter users, Salud America! launched the #SaludTues Tweetchat series. In this paper, we explore the use of #SaludTues to promote advocacy for Latinx health equity. This study aims to understand how #SaludTues Tweetchats are used to promote dissemination of culturally relevant information on social determinants of health, to determine whether tweetchats serve to drive web traffic to the Salud America! website, and to understand who participates in #SaludTues Tweetchats and what we can learn about the participants. We also aim to share our own experiences and present a step-by-step guide of how tweetchats are planned, developed, promoted, and executed. We explored tweetchat data collected between 2014 and 2018 using Symplur and Google Analytics to identify groups of stakeholders and web traffic. Network analysis and mapping tools were also used to derive insights from this series of chats. We conducted 187 chats with 24,609 reported users, 177,466 tweets, and more than 1.87 billion impressions using the hashtag #SaludTues during this span, demonstrating effective dissemination of and exposure to culturally relevant information. Traffic to the Salud America! website was higher on Tuesdays than any other day of the week, suggesting that #SaludTues Tweetchats acted effectively as a website traffic-driving tool. Most participants came from advocacy organizations (165/1000, 16.5%) and other health care-related organizations (162/1000, 16.2%), whereas others were unknown users (147/1000, 14.7%) and individual users outside of the health care sector (117/1000, 11.7%). The majority of participants were located in Texas, California, New York, and Florida, all states with high Latinx populations. Carefully planned, culturally relevant tweetchats such as #SaludTues can be a powerful tool for public health practitioners and advocates to engage audiences on Twitter around health issues, advocacy, and policy solutions for Latino health equity. Further information is needed to determine the effect that #SaludTues Tweetchats have on self- and collective efficacy for advocacy in the area of Latino health equity.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Latinx people comprise 18% of the US adult population and a large share of youth and continue to experience inequities that perpetuate health disparities. To engage Latinx people in advocacy for health equity based on this population's heavy share of smartphone, social media, and Twitter users, Salud America! launched the #SaludTues Tweetchat series. In this paper, we explore the use of #SaludTues to promote advocacy for Latinx health equity.
OBJECTIVE
This study aims to understand how #SaludTues Tweetchats are used to promote dissemination of culturally relevant information on social determinants of health, to determine whether tweetchats serve to drive web traffic to the Salud America! website, and to understand who participates in #SaludTues Tweetchats and what we can learn about the participants. We also aim to share our own experiences and present a step-by-step guide of how tweetchats are planned, developed, promoted, and executed.
METHODS
We explored tweetchat data collected between 2014 and 2018 using Symplur and Google Analytics to identify groups of stakeholders and web traffic. Network analysis and mapping tools were also used to derive insights from this series of chats.
RESULTS
We conducted 187 chats with 24,609 reported users, 177,466 tweets, and more than 1.87 billion impressions using the hashtag #SaludTues during this span, demonstrating effective dissemination of and exposure to culturally relevant information. Traffic to the Salud America! website was higher on Tuesdays than any other day of the week, suggesting that #SaludTues Tweetchats acted effectively as a website traffic-driving tool. Most participants came from advocacy organizations (165/1000, 16.5%) and other health care-related organizations (162/1000, 16.2%), whereas others were unknown users (147/1000, 14.7%) and individual users outside of the health care sector (117/1000, 11.7%). The majority of participants were located in Texas, California, New York, and Florida, all states with high Latinx populations.
CONCLUSIONS
Carefully planned, culturally relevant tweetchats such as #SaludTues can be a powerful tool for public health practitioners and advocates to engage audiences on Twitter around health issues, advocacy, and policy solutions for Latino health equity. Further information is needed to determine the effect that #SaludTues Tweetchats have on self- and collective efficacy for advocacy in the area of Latino health equity.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33646131
pii: v7i3e21266
doi: 10.2196/21266
pmc: PMC7961409
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

e21266

Informations de copyright

©Amelie G Ramirez, Rosalie P Aguilar, Amanda Merck, Cliff Despres, Pramod Sukumaran, Stacy Cantu-Pawlik, Patricia Chalela. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (http://publichealth.jmir.org), 01.03.2021.

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Auteurs

Amelie G Ramirez (AG)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Rosalie P Aguilar (RP)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Amanda Merck (A)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Cliff Despres (C)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Pramod Sukumaran (P)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Stacy Cantu-Pawlik (S)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

Patricia Chalela (P)

Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.

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