Social media influencers can be used to deliver positive information about the flu vaccine: findings from a multi-year study

Author:

Bonnevie Erika1ORCID,Smith Sierra M1,Kummeth Caitlin2,Goldbarg Jaclyn3,Smyser Joe3

Affiliation:

1. Research Department, The Public Good Projects, 2308 Mt Vernon Ave, Suite 758, Alexandria, VA 22301, USA

2. Marketing Department, The Public Good Projects, 2308 Mt Vernon Ave, Suite 758, Alexandria, VA 22301, USA

3. Operations Department, The Public Good Projects, 2308 Mt Vernon Ave, Suite 758, Alexandria, VA 22301, USA

Abstract

Abstract Large-scale digital flu vaccine campaigns have experienced difficulty increasing vaccination coverage among African Americans and Hispanics, and are routinely inundated by negative responses from vaccine opponents. A digital campaign employing user-generated content from social media ‘micro’ influencers who are predominantly followed by African Americans and Hispanics was implemented during the 2018–19 and 2019–20 flu seasons to disseminate positive information about the flu vaccine. At the time, this constituted the largest influencer-driven health campaign focused on these communities in the United States. Comments on posts were qualitatively coded to determine content perceptions among those exposed to posts. Digital metrics were also analyzed. During Year 1, posts reached 9 million+ social media users and generated 64 612 likes or shares, and 1512 responses. In Year 2, posts reached 8 million+ users and generated 155 600 likes or shares, and 3122 responses. Around 94% of public responses to posts were positive, suggesting this is a promising strategy to communicate health information and could shift social norms, particularly for heavily debated topics such as vaccination. This strategy represents a more community-led and participatory approach than most large-scale vaccination campaigns have attempted, with immediate applicability to communications about the COVID-19 vaccine.

Funder

Kaiser Permanente

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Education

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3. Perceptions matter: beliefs about influenza vaccine and vaccination behavior among elderly white, black and Hispanic Americans;Wooten;Vaccine,2012

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