Covid-19 Tweeting in English: Gender Differences

03/24/2020
by   Mike Thelwall, et al.
0

At the start of 2020, COVID-19 became the most urgent threat to global public health. Uniquely in recent times, governments have imposed partly voluntary, partly compulsory restrictions on the population to slow the spread of the virus. In this context, public attitudes and behaviors are vitally important for reducing the death rate. Analyzing tweets about the disease may therefore give insights into public reactions that may help guide public information campaigns. This article analyses 3,038,026 English tweets about COVID-19 from March 10 to 23, 2020. It focuses on one relevant aspect of public reaction: gender differences. The results show that females are more likely to tweet about the virus in the context of family, social distancing and healthcare whereas males are more likely to tweet about sports cancellations, the global spread of the virus and political reactions. Thus, women seem to be taking a disproportionate share of the responsibility for directly keeping the population safe. The detailed results may be useful to inform public information announcements and to help understand the spread of the virus. For example, failure to impose a sporting bans whilst encouraging social distancing may send mixed messages to males.

READ FULL TEXT
research
04/06/2020

A thematic analysis of highly retweeted early COVID -19 tweets: Consensus, information, dissent, and lockdown life

Purpose: Public attitudes towards COVID-19 and social distancing are cri...
research
10/11/2022

Not Good Times for Lies: Misinformation Detection on the Russia-Ukraine War, COVID-19, and Refugees

Misinformation spread in online social networks is an urgent-to-solve pr...
research
03/25/2021

Can Twitter Give Insights into International Differences in Covid-19 Vaccination? Eight countries' English tweets to 21 March 2021

Vaccination programs may help the world to reduce or eliminate Covid-19....
research
06/29/2022

Using Twitter Data to Understand Public Perceptions of Approved versus Off-label Use for COVID-19-related Medications

Understanding public discourse on emergency use of unproven therapeutics...
research
01/14/2021

Scared into Action: How Partisanship and Fear are Associated with Reactions to Public Health Directives

Differences in political ideology are increasingly appearing as an imped...
research
11/11/2020

Exploring Gender Disparities in Time to Diagnosis

Sex and gender-based healthcare disparities contribute to differences in...
research
01/11/2021

VIDA: A simulation model of domestic VIolence in times of social DistAncing

Violence against women occurs predominantly in the family and domestic c...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset