Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia

Social media’s potential to directly interact with the public and stakeholders is huge and pertinent, especially during a health crisis. This research applied the phenomenological approach to explore themes related to COVID-19 that emerged on Facebook and Twitter before the Movement Control Order (M...

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Published in:SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
Main Author: Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor's University Lakeside Campus 2021
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85118173915&partnerID=40&md5=d94f2e4e7e89b7e339a5b6496fd6a3a1
id 2-s2.0-85118173915
spelling 2-s2.0-85118173915
Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
2021
SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
13
1

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85118173915&partnerID=40&md5=d94f2e4e7e89b7e339a5b6496fd6a3a1
Social media’s potential to directly interact with the public and stakeholders is huge and pertinent, especially during a health crisis. This research applied the phenomenological approach to explore themes related to COVID-19 that emerged on Facebook and Twitter before the Movement Control Order (MCO)(1 January-17 March 2020). For this purpose, the top 10 influencers/pages from Facebook and Twitter, including The Ministry of Health’s social account were selected, pooling around 51 million Malaysian Facebook and Twitter users and engaging around 6,068 mentions. The thematic analysis reveals that a number of health, politics, economic and policy issues emerged before the Malaysian government enforced the MCO on 18 March 2020. The themes that emerged varied according to the situation and the early impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The findings enable us to understand better public sentiment and the possible different points of view regarding the dissemination of COVID-19 related information on social media platforms. These insights can help government health agencies to connect effectively with the public about health and relevant preventive measures. Specifically, this can support public health stakeholders in developing tailored strategies to monitor and prevent the COVID-19 spread. © SEARCH Journal 2021.
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
2229872X
English
Article

author Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
spellingShingle Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
author_facet Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
author_sort Khairulnissa A.K.; Krisnan L.; Kaundan M.K.; Aziz A.A.
title Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
title_short Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
title_full Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
title_fullStr Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
title_sort Emerging themes in facebook and twitter before movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia
publishDate 2021
container_title SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
container_volume 13
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85118173915&partnerID=40&md5=d94f2e4e7e89b7e339a5b6496fd6a3a1
description Social media’s potential to directly interact with the public and stakeholders is huge and pertinent, especially during a health crisis. This research applied the phenomenological approach to explore themes related to COVID-19 that emerged on Facebook and Twitter before the Movement Control Order (MCO)(1 January-17 March 2020). For this purpose, the top 10 influencers/pages from Facebook and Twitter, including The Ministry of Health’s social account were selected, pooling around 51 million Malaysian Facebook and Twitter users and engaging around 6,068 mentions. The thematic analysis reveals that a number of health, politics, economic and policy issues emerged before the Malaysian government enforced the MCO on 18 March 2020. The themes that emerged varied according to the situation and the early impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The findings enable us to understand better public sentiment and the possible different points of view regarding the dissemination of COVID-19 related information on social media platforms. These insights can help government health agencies to connect effectively with the public about health and relevant preventive measures. Specifically, this can support public health stakeholders in developing tailored strategies to monitor and prevent the COVID-19 spread. © SEARCH Journal 2021.
publisher Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
issn 2229872X
language English
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