Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has caused a global health crisis that affects many aspects of human lives. In the absence of vaccines and antivirals, several behavioral change and policy initiatives such as physical distancing have been implemented to control the spread of COVID-19. Social media data can reveal public perceptions toward how governments and health agencies worldwide are handling the pandemic, and the impact of the disease on people regardless of their geographic locations in line with various factors that hinder or facilitate the efforts to control the spread of the pandemic globally.ObjectiveThis paper aims to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on people worldwide using social media data.MethodsWe applied natural language processing (NLP) and thematic analysis to understand public opinions, experiences, and issues with respect to the COVID-19 pandemic using social media data. First, we collected over 47 million COVID-19–related comments from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and three online discussion forums. Second, we performed data preprocessing, which involved applying NLP techniques to clean and prepare the data for automated key phrase extraction. Third, we applied the NLP approach to extract meaningful key phrases from over 1 million randomly selected comments and computed sentiment score for each key phrase and assigned sentiment polarity (ie, positive, negative, or neutral) based on the score using a lexicon-based technique. Fourth, we grouped related negative and positive key phrases into categories or broad themes.ResultsA total of 34 negative themes emerged, out of which 15 were health-related issues, psychosocial issues, and social issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic from the public perspective. Some of the health-related issues were increased mortality, health concerns, struggling health systems, and fitness issues; while some of the psychosocial issues were frustrations due to life disruptions, panic shopping, and expression of fear. Social issues were harassment, domestic violence, and wrong societal attitude. In addition, 20 positive themes emerged from our results. Some of the positive themes were public awareness, encouragement, gratitude, cleaner environment, online learning, charity, spiritual support, and innovative research.ConclusionsWe uncovered various negative and positive themes representing public perceptions toward the COVID-19 pandemic and recommended interventions that can help address the health, psychosocial, and social issues based on the positive themes and other research evidence. These interventions will help governments, health professionals and agencies, institutions, and individuals in their efforts to curb the spread of COVID-19 and minimize its impact, and in reacting to any future pandemics.

Highlights

  • Infectious diseases have occurred in the past and continue to emerge

  • We uncover various negative and positive themes representing public perceptions toward the COVID-19 pandemic and recommend interventions that can help address the health, psychosocial, and social issues based on the positive themes and other remedial ideas rooted in research

  • We recommend interventions that can help address the health, psychosocial, and social issues based on the positive themes and other remedial ideas rooted in research

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Summary

Introduction

Background Infectious diseases have occurred in the past and continue to emerge. Infectious diseases are termed “emerging” if they newly appear in a population or have existed but are increasing rapidly in incidence or geographic range [1]. A 1-year estimate of the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic shows that 43 to 89 million people were infected [4] and 201,200 respiratory deaths and 83,300 cardiovascular deaths were linked to the disease [5] globally. 770,000 HIV deaths were recorded in 2018 alone, with approximately 37.9 million people already infected with the virus globally [6]. Ebola is another deadly infectious disease that has an average case fatality rate of about 50%, with a range of 25% to 90% case fatality rates in past outbreaks [2,7]. Social media data can reveal public perceptions toward how governments and health agencies across the globe are handling the pandemic, as well as the impact of the disease on people regardless of their geographic locations in line with various factors that hinder or facilitate the efforts to control the spread of the pandemic globally

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