Faculty Publications
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/18736
Publications by NITK Faculty
Browse
2 results
Search Results
Item Vaccine Hesitancy to Vaccine Hope: Comparison of MR Vaccine and COVID Vaccine Trends in India(Springer, 2022) Jayan, V.; Alathur, S.Social media played a major role during the distress in the era of Web 3.0 technologies. The use of social media for relief and rescue operations is common nowadays. But the Web 3.0 and its technologies have made the situation worse sometimes, especially in the healthcare sector. The measles-rubella (MR) vaccine campaign in India had a huge setback due to the social media. The World Health Organization (WHO) has observed that the misinformation in social media is one of the ten reasons for vaccine hesitancy. In the COVID-19 situation, the misinformation has increased tremendously but at the same time people were expecting a vaccine. The vaccine hesitancy depends on the severity of the cause of the disease and the cure of the disease. There were trends of vaccination hesitancy during the MR vaccination campaign and that has changed to vaccine hope during the COVID-19 in the social media. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.Item Health Fear Mongering Make People More Sicker: Twitter Analysis in the Context of Corona Virus Infection(Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2020) Jayan, J.; Alathur, S.The purpose of this study is to assess the fear factor in Social media data in the context of Coronavirus Disease - 2019(COVID-19) across the globe. The fear generated from social media content will adversely affect the mental health of the public. Design/methodology/approach: The study is followed by a literature survey during the emergence of social media and Internet technologies since the year 2006 where the people commonly started to use the internet across the world. The Twitter data collected on COVID-19 during the infection period and the analysis. Findings: The social media contents adversely affect the mental health of the common public and also the healthcare programs run by the government organizations to some extent. The findings show that the social media are the major source of fear-mongering information and the people behind the fear-mongering are making use of the disaster situation to set their agenda. The strict enactment of law and the efforts by the social media platforms can reduce the fake news and misinformation. Research limitations/implications: The research focuses only on the Twitter data for the analysis during the COVID-19 distress. The detailed study needs to be done in similar distress situations across the globe. The data retrieval became limited from different social media platforms because of privacy issues. © 2020, IFIP International Federation for Information Processing.
