Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake

BackgroundThe lack of trust in vaccines is a major contributor to vaccine hesitancy. To overcome vaccine hesitancy for the COVID-19 vaccine, the Australian government launched multiple public health campaigns to encourage vaccine uptake. This sentiment analysis examines the e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Murooj Yousef, Timo Dietrich, Sharyn Rundle-Thiele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2022-09-01
Series:JMIR Formative Research
Online Access:https://formative.jmir.org/2022/9/e37775
_version_ 1797734728782053376
author Murooj Yousef
Timo Dietrich
Sharyn Rundle-Thiele
author_facet Murooj Yousef
Timo Dietrich
Sharyn Rundle-Thiele
author_sort Murooj Yousef
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundThe lack of trust in vaccines is a major contributor to vaccine hesitancy. To overcome vaccine hesitancy for the COVID-19 vaccine, the Australian government launched multiple public health campaigns to encourage vaccine uptake. This sentiment analysis examines the effect of public health campaigns and COVID-19–related events on sentiment and vaccine uptake. ObjectiveThis study aims to examine the relationship between sentiment and COVID-19 vaccine uptake and government actions that impacted public sentiment about the vaccine. MethodsUsing machine learning methods, we collected 137,523 publicly available English language tweets published in Australia between February and October 2021 that contained COVID-19 vaccine–related keywords. Machine learning methods were used to extract topics and sentiments relating to COVID-19 vaccination. The relationship between public vaccination sentiment on Twitter and vaccine uptake was examined. ResultsThe majority of collected tweets expressed negative (n=91,052, 66%) rather than positive (n=21,686, 16%) or neutral (n=24,785, 18%) sentiments. Topics discussed within the study time frame included the role of the government in the vaccination rollout, availability and accessibility of the vaccine, and vaccine efficacy. There was a significant positive correlation between negative sentiment and the number of vaccine doses administered daily (r267=.15, P<.05), with positive sentiment showing the inverse effect. Public health campaigns, lockdowns, and antivaccination protests were associated with increased negative sentiment, while vaccination mandates had no significant effect on sentiment. ConclusionsThe study findings demonstrate that negative sentiment was more prevalent on Twitter during the Australian vaccination rollout but vaccine uptake remained high. Australians expressed anger at the slow rollout and limited availability of the vaccine during the study period. Public health campaigns, lockdowns, and antivaccination rallies increased negative sentiment. In contrast, news of increased vaccine availability for the public and government acquisition of more doses were key government actions that reduced negative sentiment. These findings can be used to inform government communication planning.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T12:48:36Z
format Article
id doaj.art-90a055b6d7ac49368a387fce37cd01e2
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2561-326X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T12:48:36Z
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series JMIR Formative Research
spelling doaj.art-90a055b6d7ac49368a387fce37cd01e22023-08-28T23:05:23ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Formative Research2561-326X2022-09-0169e3777510.2196/37775Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine UptakeMurooj Yousefhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8215-2627Timo Dietrichhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4824-6117Sharyn Rundle-Thielehttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-2536-3767 BackgroundThe lack of trust in vaccines is a major contributor to vaccine hesitancy. To overcome vaccine hesitancy for the COVID-19 vaccine, the Australian government launched multiple public health campaigns to encourage vaccine uptake. This sentiment analysis examines the effect of public health campaigns and COVID-19–related events on sentiment and vaccine uptake. ObjectiveThis study aims to examine the relationship between sentiment and COVID-19 vaccine uptake and government actions that impacted public sentiment about the vaccine. MethodsUsing machine learning methods, we collected 137,523 publicly available English language tweets published in Australia between February and October 2021 that contained COVID-19 vaccine–related keywords. Machine learning methods were used to extract topics and sentiments relating to COVID-19 vaccination. The relationship between public vaccination sentiment on Twitter and vaccine uptake was examined. ResultsThe majority of collected tweets expressed negative (n=91,052, 66%) rather than positive (n=21,686, 16%) or neutral (n=24,785, 18%) sentiments. Topics discussed within the study time frame included the role of the government in the vaccination rollout, availability and accessibility of the vaccine, and vaccine efficacy. There was a significant positive correlation between negative sentiment and the number of vaccine doses administered daily (r267=.15, P<.05), with positive sentiment showing the inverse effect. Public health campaigns, lockdowns, and antivaccination protests were associated with increased negative sentiment, while vaccination mandates had no significant effect on sentiment. ConclusionsThe study findings demonstrate that negative sentiment was more prevalent on Twitter during the Australian vaccination rollout but vaccine uptake remained high. Australians expressed anger at the slow rollout and limited availability of the vaccine during the study period. Public health campaigns, lockdowns, and antivaccination rallies increased negative sentiment. In contrast, news of increased vaccine availability for the public and government acquisition of more doses were key government actions that reduced negative sentiment. These findings can be used to inform government communication planning.https://formative.jmir.org/2022/9/e37775
spellingShingle Murooj Yousef
Timo Dietrich
Sharyn Rundle-Thiele
Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
JMIR Formative Research
title Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
title_full Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
title_fullStr Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
title_full_unstemmed Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
title_short Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Sentiment and Topic Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccination on Twitter and Vaccine Uptake
title_sort actions speak louder than words sentiment and topic analysis of covid 19 vaccination on twitter and vaccine uptake
url https://formative.jmir.org/2022/9/e37775
work_keys_str_mv AT muroojyousef actionsspeaklouderthanwordssentimentandtopicanalysisofcovid19vaccinationontwitterandvaccineuptake
AT timodietrich actionsspeaklouderthanwordssentimentandtopicanalysisofcovid19vaccinationontwitterandvaccineuptake
AT sharynrundlethiele actionsspeaklouderthanwordssentimentandtopicanalysisofcovid19vaccinationontwitterandvaccineuptake