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Articles

Mapping the connections of health professionals to COVID-19 myths and facts in the Australian Twittersphere

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 1789-1811 | Received 09 Apr 2021, Accepted 12 Jan 2022, Published online: 09 Feb 2022
 

ABSTRACT

The spread of COVID-19 misinformation on social media has elicited concern amongst scholars, health agencies and governments owing to its potential harms to public health. This article addresses the question of how networks of Australian health professionals engaged with COVID-19 facts and myths on Twitter between August and October 2020. After reviewing selected literature on COVID-19 misinformation, we present our analytical choices and the methodology we used to constitute datasets of COVID-19 factual and mythical hashtags and of verified Australian health professional accounts (N:377). The article distinguishes between the capacities of ‘actor-actants’ and ‘issue-actants,’ and between the adoption of ‘field’ and ‘contested’ hashtags during a controversy. We identify categories of Australian health professional Twitter accounts such as GPs, nurses, specialists, public health professionals and researchers, and analyse the patterns of connections between these actor-actants and COVID-19 facts and myths. We find that these categories exhibit clearly distinct behaviour when tweeting or retweeting factual and mythical hashtags. Even though the rate of Australian health professionals’ connection with myths in comparison to facts on Twitter is low, hashtags such as #hydroxychloroquine attracted significant engagement. We examine these hashtags’ context and find that they were mainly being debunked, though a minority of accounts endorsed them. We analyse these adoption patterns, and critically assess the ‘echo chamber effect.’ We also consider public health and privacy implications for the dissemination of accurate information, for trust in health professionals during a pandemic, and for combatting misinformation.

Notes

1 Facebook’s track record with regards to hate speech and misinformation is appalling (Mozur, Citation2018; Horwitz & Seetharaman, Citation2020, May 26; Silverman et al., Citation2020). On October 7, 2020, QAnon was banned from the platform, though related groups remained. On October 12, Facebook announced it would ban holocaust deniers. On October 13, Facebook declared that it would launch a new global policy that bans ads ‘that discourage people from getting vaccines’ (Graham & Rodriguez, Citation2020). On February 9, 2021, Facebook banned ‘posts with false information about vaccines’ (Paul, Citation2021). In September 2021, the Wall Street Journal began publishing internal documents, leaked by a former Facebook employee, which revealed that Facebook executives purposely chose to incite polarisation on their platform as ‘anger drives engagement’ (WSJ, Citation2021).

4 Users featuring Australian location names listed in the Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS) Edition 3 (https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/standards/australian-statistical-geography-standard-asgs-edition-3/jul2021-jun2026/access-and-downloads/allocation-files) and not featuring location names in other countries are considered as Australian accounts.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the University of Canberra.

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