News

How is Instagram used by the leading health agencies to engage with the public during the COVID-19 crisis?

Most of the images shared by major health agencies (NHS, CDC, WHO, IFRC) relate to preventive measures, health advisories, gratitude and resilience of front-line workers. Social media messaging depicting well known personalities, influencers, and celebrities received greater engagement. Furthermore, posts with inquisitive messaging, infographics, or dispelling myths/fake news/misinformation also receive more attention.
instagram posts about Covid

Pictures can speak a thousand words! Given the significance of images for online information sharing, a team of researchers attempted to understand how pictures on social media can be used to communicate and engage the public with health messaging during a crisis. More specifically, the research focuses on the kind of messaging that has been portrayed by the leading public health agencies through Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, Instagram user engagement was assessed through likes and comments indices.

Aqdas Malik, a researcher in the Department of Computer Science collaborated with researchers from USA (M. Laeeq Khan, Ohio University) and Canada (Anabel Quan-Haase, Western University) to study social media posts by the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), and the National Health Service (NHS), UK. The team found that posts that performed very well in terms of likes and comments were those with pictures of celebrities, posts alerting/dispelling myths, fake news, or misinformation, infographics and data visualization.

“As most of the online users barely confirm the reliability of social media content before sharing with their network, huge responsibility lies on the shoulders of social media companies.” said Dr. Malik; “This is critical as the majority of the public around the globe get COVID related information through social media and most of the misinformation, disinformation, and conspiracies about the pandemic has been spread through these platforms.”

The team analyzed the Instagram presence of four major health agencies (NHS, CDC, WHO, IFRC) and found how the posts varied in their content theme, gender depiction, person portrayal, and image type. They compared how the different content of these posts resulted in different levels of engagement on Instagram. They found that effective strategies for public health organizations to use on Instagram include inquisitive messaging and infographics, as these performed well on the platform. This entails an effective data analytics and visualization strategy that should be employed by organizations especially for crisis and emergency risk communication.

“Instagram can be a highly engaging tool for reaching youth during crises and emergencies, in scenarios where younger demographics may not be effectively targeted by mainstream media” concludes Dr. Malik. The paper “Public health agencies outreach through Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic: Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication perspective” is available to read online here https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102346

Contact Details:

Aqdas Malik
Department of Computer Science
Aalto University
[email protected]

  • Published:
  • Updated:

Read more news

Three photos on blue background showing adults and children standing around tables
Campus, Research & Art Published:

"Bring your child to work day" 2024 at the Department of Applied Physics

Find out about a fun morning spent making ice cream for children hosted by the Department of Applied Physics
Modern and Mesopotamian people experience love in a rather similar way. In Mesopotamia, love is particularly associated with the liver, heart and knees. Figure: Modern/PNAS: Lauri Nummenmaa et al. 2014, Mesopotamian: Juha Lahnakoski 2024.
Press releases Published:

We might feel love in our fingertips –– but did the Ancient Mesopotamians?

A multidisciplinary team of researchers studied a large body of texts to find out how people in the ancient Mesopotamian region (within modern day Iraq) experienced emotions in their bodies thousands of years ago, analysing one million words of the ancient Akkadian language from 934-612 BC in the form of cuneiform scripts on clay tablets.
Three white, folded paper structures of varying sizes and shapes arranged on a grey surface.
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

New origami packaging technology creates sustainable and eye-catching alternatives to conventional packing materials

Origami packaging enables completely new properties for cartonboard, making it an excellent alternative to, for example, plastic and expanded polystyrene in packaging. The aesthetics of the material have also garnered interest from designers.
Jose Lado.
Research & Art Published:

Quantum physics professor searches for exotic qubit alternatives with new European funding

Aalto University physics professor Jose Lado will use this funding to engineer a new type of topological quantum material that could have applications for quantum bit, or “qubit,” development for noise-resilient topological quantum computation.