Strong anti-vaccination sentiment is all over twitter with increased new mom states likely to be hotbed for these twitter users.
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‘Monitoring anti-vaccination beliefs on Twitter can uncover vaccine-related concerns and misconceptions helping pediatricians refute the arguments.’
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"The debate online is far from over. There is still a very vocal group of people out there who are opposed to vaccines," said study co-author Chris Vargo, an assistant professor in the College of Media Communication and Information. "Half of the talk online that we observed about vaccines was negative." ![twitter](https://images.medindia.net/icons/news/social/twitter.png)
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For the study, published in Social Science and Medicine, Vargo and co-authors Theodore Tomeny, an autism researcher with University of Alabama, created a machine-learning algorithm to examine more than a half-million tweets from around the country between 2009 and 2015. To make the sample a manageable size, they looked only at tweets that referred to both autism spectrum disorder and vaccines.
For two decades anti-vaccine activists have suggested that certain vaccines can lead to autism, often referring to a 1998 study of 12 children, published in the Lancet, which suggested that the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine predisposed youth to developmental disorders.
The Lancet retracted the paper in 2010 and subsequent studies have failed to find a causal link.
"Time and time again researchers have tried to substantiate this idea that there is a link between autism and vaccines but they have not been able to," says Tomeny. "Unfortunately the idea is still very much out there, being promoted by a vocal minority online. That's problematic because often only one side of the story is being told."
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Vargo wanted to use expansive data sets to ask the questions: How prevalent is the sentiment online; is it growing; and where does it cluster geographically?
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Within states, sentiment varied widely from city to city.
For instance, in Denver, 24 percent of tweets over the course of five years were anti-vaccine while in Fort Collins, Colo. 59 percent were.
Vargo stressed that he does not see Twitter posts as a representative sample of overall public opinion, but rather a pulse of the level of anti-vaccine activism in an area.
Ultimately, he envisions using the algorithm developed for the study to create real-time maps that pediatricians could use to gauge anti-vaccine sentiment in their communities.
He also imagines a day when public health agencies could develop targeted campaigns presenting the latest evidence about vaccine safety for those living in anti-vaccine hotbed regions.
"Monitoring anti-vaccination beliefs on Twitter can uncover vaccine-related concerns and misconceptions, serve as an indicator of shifts in public opinion and equip pediatricians to refute anti-vaccine arguments," the authors concluded.
Source-Eurekalert