Abstract

Developing countries, particularly Nigeria, continually find it challenging to proactively and actively carry out early-stage surveillance for disease outbreaks due to the lack of quality workforce, a dearth of public health data, and the absence of automated surveillance systems in the country. This study presents the potential and ability of Twitter in tracking early detection of COVID-19, monitoring the dissemination of information, and exploration of public awareness and attitudes among Nigerians. Tweets mentioning COVID-19 and related keywords were collected in 11 batches via the NCapture™ plugin available on Google Chrome from February 20 - May 6, 2020. The analysis includes a time series analysis to track the distribution of data and content analysis to analyze the knowledge and attitudes of Nigerians. A total of 67,989 tweets (1,484 unique and 66,505 retweets) citing COVID-19 and related keywords were returned. The Tweets started to emerge earlier to the first confirmed case in Nigeria while maintaining a dangling-upward movement up to the 11th week under study. Matters arising from the tweets include a dearth of information on COVID-19 and optimism among others. The results provide insight into the intersection of SNSs and public health surveillance. Results show how helpful Twitter is to educate education in public health. Health organizations and the government may benefit from paying attention to both amusing and emotional contents from the Twitter community to formulate a viable policy for treatment and control.

Highlights

  • Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was initially called Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) during its earliest stages of discovery in Wuhan City, Hubei Province of China (WHO, 2020d; Cleland et al, 2020)

  • Nigeria confirmed her first case of COVID-19 in Lagos State on February 27, 2020, when an Italian who works in Nigeria returned from Milan, Italy to Lagos, Nigeria on the 25th of February 2020 (Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, 2020a, b)

  • The tweets are collected in English and the keywords used for the identification of COVID-19 related tweets in Nigeria were informed by trending words on Twitter and most search words on Google between February 20, 2020, and May 6, 2020

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Summary

Introduction

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was initially called Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) during its earliest stages of discovery in Wuhan City, Hubei Province of China (WHO, 2020d; Cleland et al, 2020). The disease was announced by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a pandemic on March 11, 2020 (Cleland et al, 2020; WHO, 2020b); the first pandemic since the H1N1 swine flu in July 2009 (WHO, 2009). Nigeria confirmed her first case of COVID-19 in Lagos State on February 27, 2020, when an Italian who works in Nigeria returned from Milan, Italy to Lagos, Nigeria on the 25th of February 2020 (Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, 2020a, b). Despite various interventions, in Nigeria, surveillance, and containment remains difficult, not just because of the adverse effect of a typical infectious pandemic disease (WHO Regional Office for Africa, 2016), and as a result of poor surveillance of public health outbreaks in the country

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