More than one-third of all Americans age 12 and over remain unvaccinated for COVID-19. The latest Kaiser Family Foundation poll indicates that hesitancy and acceptance of these vaccines varies by geographic, sociodemographic, and cultural factors. While we often think about vaccine hesitancy on an individual level, these individuals belong to communities that respond to the COVID-19 vaccine in very different ways. A new Twitter analysis led by LDI senior fellow Sharath Chandra Guntuku offers tantalizing clues about differences in how certain communities talk about the pandemic, and may help target public health messages to improve vaccine acceptance.
The American Communities Project (ACP) categorized U.S. counties into 15 distinct community types. Using this typology, Guntuku and team analyzed a random sample of more than 78 million vaccine-related tweets posted between December 1, 2020, and February 28, 2021. They found significant differences in vaccine topics in eight of these communities.
The topics reveal different community concerns (at least among those who tweet). For example, counties in the African American South posted about issues of trust, hesitancy, and history, while Hispanic centers posted their concerns around food and water. Evangelical hubs posted about Operation Warp Speed and thanking God. Urban suburbs posted about equitable distribution in communities, exurbs posted about the 2020 election, and rural middle America posted about nursing homes and long term senior resident facilities. College towns talked about in-clinic vaccinations near universities, while “graying America” posted about personal choice and freedom.
These differences in Twitter discourse seem to be associated with different vaccination rates in these communities. Urban suburbs, middle suburbs, and big cities lead with more than 35% of the population being fully vaccinated, while less than 25% of people in evangelical hubs and the African American South are fully vaccinated. Hispanic centers have the lowest vaccination rates at less than 15%, as of June 2021.
This story is by Janet Weiner. Read more at Penn LDI.