Cargando…

Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021

BACKGROUND: Large racial and ethnic disparities in adverse birth outcomes persist. Increasing evidence points to the potential role of racism in creating and perpetuating these disparities. Valid measures of area-level racial attitudes and bias remain elusive, but capture an important and underexplo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nguyen, Thu T, Merchant, Junaid S, Criss, Shaniece, Makres, Katrina, Gowda, Krishik N, Mane, Heran, Yue, Xiaohe, Hswen, Yulin, Glymour, M Maria, Nguyen, Quynh C, Allen, Amani M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10182466/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37115602
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/44990
_version_ 1785041773225050112
author Nguyen, Thu T
Merchant, Junaid S
Criss, Shaniece
Makres, Katrina
Gowda, Krishik N
Mane, Heran
Yue, Xiaohe
Hswen, Yulin
Glymour, M Maria
Nguyen, Quynh C
Allen, Amani M
author_facet Nguyen, Thu T
Merchant, Junaid S
Criss, Shaniece
Makres, Katrina
Gowda, Krishik N
Mane, Heran
Yue, Xiaohe
Hswen, Yulin
Glymour, M Maria
Nguyen, Quynh C
Allen, Amani M
author_sort Nguyen, Thu T
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Large racial and ethnic disparities in adverse birth outcomes persist. Increasing evidence points to the potential role of racism in creating and perpetuating these disparities. Valid measures of area-level racial attitudes and bias remain elusive, but capture an important and underexplored form of racism that may help explain these disparities. Cultural values and attitudes expressed through social media reflect and shape public norms and subsequent behaviors. Few studies have quantified attitudes toward different racial groups using social media with the aim of examining associations with birth outcomes. OBJECTIVE: We used Twitter data to measure state-level racial sentiments and investigate associations with preterm birth (PTB) and low birth weight (LBW) in a multiracial or ethnic sample of mothers in the United States. METHODS: A random 1% sample of publicly available tweets from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2021, was collected using Twitter’s Academic Application Programming Interface (N=56,400,097). Analyses were on English-language tweets from the United States that used one or more race-related keywords. We assessed the sentiment of each tweet using support vector machine, a supervised machine learning model. We used 5-fold cross-validation to assess model performance and achieved high accuracy for negative sentiment classification (91%) and a high F1 score (84%). For each year, the state-level racial sentiment was merged with birth data during that year (~3 million births per year). We estimated incidence ratios for LBW and PTB using log binomial regression models, among all mothers, Black mothers, racially minoritized mothers (Asian, Black, or Latina mothers), and White mothers. Models were controlled for individual-level maternal characteristics and state-level demographics. RESULTS: Mothers living in states in the highest tertile of negative racial sentiment for tweets referencing racial and ethnic minoritized groups had an 8% higher (95% CI 3%-13%) incidence of LBW and 5% higher (95% CI 0%-11%) incidence of PTB compared to mothers living in the lowest tertile. Negative racial sentiment referencing racially minoritized groups was associated with adverse birth outcomes in the total population, among minoritized mothers, and White mothers. Black mothers living in states in the highest tertile of negative Black sentiment had 6% (95% CI 1%-11%) and 7% (95% CI 2%-13%) higher incidence of LBW and PTB, respectively, compared to mothers living in the lowest tertile. Negative Latinx sentiment was associated with a 6% (95% CI 1%-11%) and 3% (95% CI 0%-6%) higher incidence of LBW and PTB among Latina mothers, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Twitter-derived negative state-level racial sentiment toward racially minoritized groups was associated with a higher risk of adverse birth outcomes among the total population and racially minoritized groups. Policies and supports establishing an inclusive environment accepting of all races and cultures may decrease the overall risk of adverse birth outcomes and reduce racial birth outcome disparities.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10182466
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101824662023-05-14 Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021 Nguyen, Thu T Merchant, Junaid S Criss, Shaniece Makres, Katrina Gowda, Krishik N Mane, Heran Yue, Xiaohe Hswen, Yulin Glymour, M Maria Nguyen, Quynh C Allen, Amani M J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Large racial and ethnic disparities in adverse birth outcomes persist. Increasing evidence points to the potential role of racism in creating and perpetuating these disparities. Valid measures of area-level racial attitudes and bias remain elusive, but capture an important and underexplored form of racism that may help explain these disparities. Cultural values and attitudes expressed through social media reflect and shape public norms and subsequent behaviors. Few studies have quantified attitudes toward different racial groups using social media with the aim of examining associations with birth outcomes. OBJECTIVE: We used Twitter data to measure state-level racial sentiments and investigate associations with preterm birth (PTB) and low birth weight (LBW) in a multiracial or ethnic sample of mothers in the United States. METHODS: A random 1% sample of publicly available tweets from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2021, was collected using Twitter’s Academic Application Programming Interface (N=56,400,097). Analyses were on English-language tweets from the United States that used one or more race-related keywords. We assessed the sentiment of each tweet using support vector machine, a supervised machine learning model. We used 5-fold cross-validation to assess model performance and achieved high accuracy for negative sentiment classification (91%) and a high F1 score (84%). For each year, the state-level racial sentiment was merged with birth data during that year (~3 million births per year). We estimated incidence ratios for LBW and PTB using log binomial regression models, among all mothers, Black mothers, racially minoritized mothers (Asian, Black, or Latina mothers), and White mothers. Models were controlled for individual-level maternal characteristics and state-level demographics. RESULTS: Mothers living in states in the highest tertile of negative racial sentiment for tweets referencing racial and ethnic minoritized groups had an 8% higher (95% CI 3%-13%) incidence of LBW and 5% higher (95% CI 0%-11%) incidence of PTB compared to mothers living in the lowest tertile. Negative racial sentiment referencing racially minoritized groups was associated with adverse birth outcomes in the total population, among minoritized mothers, and White mothers. Black mothers living in states in the highest tertile of negative Black sentiment had 6% (95% CI 1%-11%) and 7% (95% CI 2%-13%) higher incidence of LBW and PTB, respectively, compared to mothers living in the lowest tertile. Negative Latinx sentiment was associated with a 6% (95% CI 1%-11%) and 3% (95% CI 0%-6%) higher incidence of LBW and PTB among Latina mothers, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Twitter-derived negative state-level racial sentiment toward racially minoritized groups was associated with a higher risk of adverse birth outcomes among the total population and racially minoritized groups. Policies and supports establishing an inclusive environment accepting of all races and cultures may decrease the overall risk of adverse birth outcomes and reduce racial birth outcome disparities. JMIR Publications 2023-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10182466/ /pubmed/37115602 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/44990 Text en ©Thu T Nguyen, Junaid S Merchant, Shaniece Criss, Katrina Makres, Krishik N Gowda, Heran Mane, Xiaohe Yue, Yulin Hswen, M Maria Glymour, Quynh C Nguyen, Amani M Allen. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 28.04.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Nguyen, Thu T
Merchant, Junaid S
Criss, Shaniece
Makres, Katrina
Gowda, Krishik N
Mane, Heran
Yue, Xiaohe
Hswen, Yulin
Glymour, M Maria
Nguyen, Quynh C
Allen, Amani M
Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title_full Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title_fullStr Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title_full_unstemmed Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title_short Examining Twitter-Derived Negative Racial Sentiment as Indicators of Cultural Racism: Observational Associations With Preterm Birth and Low Birth Weight Among a Multiracial Sample of Mothers, 2011-2021
title_sort examining twitter-derived negative racial sentiment as indicators of cultural racism: observational associations with preterm birth and low birth weight among a multiracial sample of mothers, 2011-2021
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10182466/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37115602
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/44990
work_keys_str_mv AT nguyenthut examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT merchantjunaids examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT crissshaniece examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT makreskatrina examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT gowdakrishikn examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT maneheran examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT yuexiaohe examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT hswenyulin examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT glymourmmaria examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT nguyenquynhc examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021
AT allenamanim examiningtwitterderivednegativeracialsentimentasindicatorsofculturalracismobservationalassociationswithpretermbirthandlowbirthweightamongamultiracialsampleofmothers20112021