Tobacco Induced Diseases (Oct 2022)

Attitudes towards the ‘Shisha No Thanks’ campaign video: Content analysis of Facebook comments

  • Lilian Chan,
  • Ben Harris-Roxas,
  • Becky Freeman,
  • Ross MacKenzie,
  • Lisa Woodland,
  • Blythe J. O'Hara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18332/tid/153543
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. October
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Introduction While social media are commonly used in public health campaigns, there is a gap in our understanding of what happens after the campaign is seen by the target audience. This study aims to understand how the Shisha No Thanks campaign video was received by the Facebook audience by analyzing Facebook comments posted to it. Specifically, this study aims to determine whether the Facebook audience accepted or rejected the campaign’s message. Methods A sample of the Facebook comments was extracted, and the study team, which included cultural support workers, developed content categories consistent with the research question. Each comment was then coded by three team members, and only assigned a category if there was agreement by at least two members. Results Of the 4990 comments that were sampled, 9.1% (456) accepted the campaign message, 22.9% (1144) rejected the message, 21.8% (1089) were unclear, and 46.1% (2301) contained only tagged names. Of the sample, 2.8% (138) indicated the commenter took on board the campaign message by expressing an intention to stop smoking shisha, or asking a friend to stop smoking shisha. Of the comments that showed rejection of the campaign, the majority were people dismissing the campaign by laughing at it or expressing pro-shisha sentiments. Conclusions This study demonstrates that conducting content analyses of social media comments can provide important insight into how a campaign message is received by a social media audience.

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