Multifaceted Nature of Social Media Content Propagating COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy: Ukrainian Case

COVID-19 became an issue affecting different parts of our life. Different communication campaigns use vaccination as an information peg, argument in discussions, and so on. As a result, they have an impact on people’s attitudes to immunization. We applied the message analysis to the dataset of socia...

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Published inProcedia computer science Vol. 198; pp. 682 - 687
Main Authors Zakharchenko, Olena, Avramenko, Roksolana, Zakharchenko, Artem, Korobchuk, Anastasiya, Fedushko, Solomiia, Syerov, Yuriy, Trach, Olha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.01.2022
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Summary:COVID-19 became an issue affecting different parts of our life. Different communication campaigns use vaccination as an information peg, argument in discussions, and so on. As a result, they have an impact on people’s attitudes to immunization. We applied the message analysis to the dataset of social media posts from Ukraine to detect the messages used in the communication regarding the vaccine and reveal communication campaigns propagating these messages. We found five campaigns launched by different actors and shaping the attitude to COVID-19 immunization expressed in the people’s posts. The incoherence of the information about immunization and authorities’ inconsistency in the communications about vaccines may lead to vaccine hesitancy and undermine confidence in the sources of the official information about COVID-19. Vaccine hesitancy has multifaceted nature and cannot be reduced just to politicians’ conspiracy theories or far-right propaganda.
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ISSN:1877-0509
1877-0509
DOI:10.1016/j.procs.2021.12.306