Abstract

BackgroundOne in eight women will develop breast cancer in her lifetime. The best-known awareness event is breast cancer awareness month (BCAM). BCAM month outreach efforts have been associated with increased media coverage, screening mammography and online information searching. Traditional mass media coverage has been enhanced by social media. However, there is a dearth of literature about how social media is used during awareness-related events. The purpose of this research was to understand how Twitter is being used during BCAM.MethodsThis was a cross-sectional, descriptive study. We collected breast cancer- related tweets from 26 September - 12 November 2012, using Twitter’s application programming interface. We classified Twitter users into organizations, individuals, and celebrities; each tweet was classified as an original or a retweet, and inclusion of a mention, meaning a reference to another Twitter user with @username. Statistical methods included ANOVA and chi square. For content analysis, we used computational linguistics techniques, specifically the MALLET implementation of the unsupervised topic modeling algorithm Latent Dirichlet Allocation.ResultsThere were 1,351,823 tweets by 797,827 unique users. Tweets spiked dramatically the first few days then tapered off. There was an average of 1.69 tweets per user. The majority of users were individuals. Nearly all of the tweets were original. Organizations and celebrities posted more often than individuals. On average celebrities made far more impressions; they were also retweeted more often and their tweets were more likely to include mentions. Individuals were more likely to direct a tweet to a specific person. Organizations and celebrities emphasized fundraisers, early detection, and diagnoses while individuals tweeted about wearing pink.ConclusionsTweeting about breast cancer was a singular event. The majority of tweets did not promote any specific preventive behavior. Twitter is being used mostly as a one-way communication tool. To expand the reach of the message and maximize the potential for word-of-mouth marketing using Twitter, organizations need a strategic communications plan to ensure on-going social media conversations. Organizations may consider collaborating with individuals and celebrities in these conversations. Social media communication strategies that emphasize fundraising for breast cancer research seem particularly appropriate.

Highlights

  • One in eight women will develop breast cancer in her lifetime

  • Media coverage of breast cancer, including breast cancer awareness month (BCAM) and associated events has been a key component to increasing awareness of breast cancer and rates of screening mammograms

  • There is a dearth of literature about how social media, Twitter, is being used to increase awareness about health issues, including those identified as part of national health observances (NHO) which are days, weeks, or months dedicated to a focus on specific health topics in the United States

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One in eight women will develop breast cancer in her lifetime. The best-known awareness event is breast cancer awareness month (BCAM). The spread of the breast cancer message is no longer limited to traditional media outlets because individuals have access to several social media platforms for both finding Both men and women are likely to use Twitter, but adults less than 30 years old, Blacks and Hispanics, and people living in urban settings have higher usage rates [1]. In a study of how organizations use the social networking site Facebook for cancer awareness and community building, researchers found that five key activities were: to inform and educate, provide support, share testimony, advocate, and raise funds These functions may be the same for cancer organizations using Twitter [11]. In the early 1990s the United States government recognized the month of October as an official national health observance for breast cancer awareness [12]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call