COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media

Purpose: This study analyzed the insights and sentiments of COVID-19 anti-vaccine comments from Instagram feeds and Facebook postings. The sentiments related to the acceptance and effectiveness of the vaccines that were on the verge of being made available to the public. Patients and methods: The qu...

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Main Authors: Wong, Li Ping, Lin, Yulan, Alias, Haridah, Abu Bakar, Sazaly, Zhao, Qinjian, Hu, Zhijian
Format: Article
Published: MDPI 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/28171/
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spelling my.um.eprints.281712022-03-05T07:29:05Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/28171/ COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media Wong, Li Ping Lin, Yulan Alias, Haridah Abu Bakar, Sazaly Zhao, Qinjian Hu, Zhijian RA Public aspects of medicine Purpose: This study analyzed the insights and sentiments of COVID-19 anti-vaccine comments from Instagram feeds and Facebook postings. The sentiments related to the acceptance and effectiveness of the vaccines that were on the verge of being made available to the public. Patients and methods: The qualitative software QSR-NVivo 10 was used to manage, code, and analyse the data. Results: The analyses uncovered several major issues concerning COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. The production of the COVID-19 vaccine at an unprecedented speed evoked the fear of skipping steps that would compromise vaccine safety. The unknown long-term effects and duration of protection erode confidence in taking the vaccines. There were also persistent concerns with regard to vaccine compositions that could be harmful or contain aborted foetal cells. The rate of COVID-19 death was viewed as low. Many interpreted the 95% effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine as insufficient. Preference for immunity gains from having an infection was viewed as more effective. Peer-reviewed publication-based data were favoured as a source of trust in vaccination decision-making. Conclusions: The anti-COVID-19 vaccine sentiments found in this study provide important insights for the formulation of public health messages to instill confidence in the vaccines. MDPI 2021-11 Article PeerReviewed Wong, Li Ping and Lin, Yulan and Alias, Haridah and Abu Bakar, Sazaly and Zhao, Qinjian and Hu, Zhijian (2021) COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media. Healthcare, 9 (11). ISSN 2227-9032, DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111530 <https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111530>. 10.3390/healthcare9111530
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic RA Public aspects of medicine
spellingShingle RA Public aspects of medicine
Wong, Li Ping
Lin, Yulan
Alias, Haridah
Abu Bakar, Sazaly
Zhao, Qinjian
Hu, Zhijian
COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
description Purpose: This study analyzed the insights and sentiments of COVID-19 anti-vaccine comments from Instagram feeds and Facebook postings. The sentiments related to the acceptance and effectiveness of the vaccines that were on the verge of being made available to the public. Patients and methods: The qualitative software QSR-NVivo 10 was used to manage, code, and analyse the data. Results: The analyses uncovered several major issues concerning COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. The production of the COVID-19 vaccine at an unprecedented speed evoked the fear of skipping steps that would compromise vaccine safety. The unknown long-term effects and duration of protection erode confidence in taking the vaccines. There were also persistent concerns with regard to vaccine compositions that could be harmful or contain aborted foetal cells. The rate of COVID-19 death was viewed as low. Many interpreted the 95% effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine as insufficient. Preference for immunity gains from having an infection was viewed as more effective. Peer-reviewed publication-based data were favoured as a source of trust in vaccination decision-making. Conclusions: The anti-COVID-19 vaccine sentiments found in this study provide important insights for the formulation of public health messages to instill confidence in the vaccines.
format Article
author Wong, Li Ping
Lin, Yulan
Alias, Haridah
Abu Bakar, Sazaly
Zhao, Qinjian
Hu, Zhijian
author_facet Wong, Li Ping
Lin, Yulan
Alias, Haridah
Abu Bakar, Sazaly
Zhao, Qinjian
Hu, Zhijian
author_sort Wong, Li Ping
title COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
title_short COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
title_full COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
title_fullStr COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: Analyses of comments from social media
title_sort covid-19 anti-vaccine sentiments: analyses of comments from social media
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/28171/
_version_ 1735409541556731904
score 13.188404