key: cord-0770498-bgj97s5o authors: Zhu, Yuner; Fu, King-Wa; Grépin, Karen A.; Liang, Hai; Fung, Isaac Chun-Hai title: Limited Early Warnings and Public Attention to Coronavirus Disease 2019 in China, January–February, 2020: A Longitudinal Cohort of Randomly Sampled Weibo Users date: 2020-04-03 journal: Disaster medicine and public health preparedness DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2020.68 sha: 5a0e5df17516426529e78e61e3b176a53aa82816 doc_id: 770498 cord_uid: bgj97s5o OBJECTIVE: Awareness and attentiveness have implications for the acceptance and adoption of disease prevention and control measures. Social media posts provide a record of the public’s attention to an outbreak. To measure the attention of Chinese netizens to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a pre-established nationally representative cohort of Weibo users was searched for COVID-19-related key words in their posts. METHODS: COVID-19-related posts (N = 1101) were retrieved from a longitudinal cohort of 52 268 randomly sampled Weibo accounts (December 31, 2019–February 12, 2020). RESULTS: Attention to COVID-19 was limited prior to China openly acknowledging human-to-human transmission on January 20. Following this date, attention quickly increased and has remained high over time. Particularly high levels of social media traffic appeared around when Wuhan was first placed in quarantine (January 23–24, 8–9% of the overall posts), when a scandal associated with the Red Cross Society of China occurred (February 1, 8%), and, following the death of Dr Li Wenliang (February 6–7, 11%), one of the whistleblowers who was reprimanded by the Chinese police in early January for discussing this outbreak online. CONCLUSION: Limited early warnings represent missed opportunities to engage citizens earlier in the outbreak. Governments should more proactively communicate early warnings to the public in a transparent manner. S ince December 2019, the world witnessed an epidemic of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). After cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) appeared in the city of Wuhan, local health authorities made a public announcement and China notified the World Health Organization about the outbreak on December 31, 2019. 1 In a matter of weeks, tens of thousands of cases would appear throughout China and in many countries around the world. In a tightly controlled media environment, it is unclear when regular Chinese citizens became aware of the outbreak and if aware, how much attention they paid to it. Awareness and attentiveness may have implications for the acceptance and adoption of prevention and control measures. To measure the attention of Chinese netizens to COVID-19, we used a pre-established nationally representative cohort of randomly sampled Weibo users and searched for COVID-19-related key words in their posts. Sina Weibo is the largest microblog service provider in mainland China, that is, China's equivalent of Twitter. The social media platform had 497 million monthly active users as of September 2019. 2 The data used herein were collected by Weiboscope, a research project led by coauthor KWF. Since 2010, the research team has been collecting the social media data through Sina Weibo's Open Application Programming Interface by sampling a list of high-profile users and random users, whose posts are programmatically retrieved every 15-20 minutes by a cluster of computer servers. 3 If a once-published post is found to be absent in the next retrieval of the user's timeline, an additional request is made to confirm whether the post is truly censored, that is, return of an error message of "permission denied" indicating a censored message. 3 The current study analyzed the posts from 52 268 randomly sampled accounts in the Weiboscope database, whose 10-digit unique user identity codes were randomly selected in 2015 and their published posts have been longitudinally recorded. This cohort constitutes a representative sample of the whole user population of Weibo. 4 We compiled a priori a list of key words in simplified Chinese characters that were pertinent to the COVID-19 outbreak in China. The key word list was checked and confirmed by all authors, including bilingual epidemiologists and communication scientists, to be sufficiently inclusive and specific (see Supplementary Technical Appendix). The time frame of our study was from December 31, 2019 through February 12, 2020. A daily percentage was computed by dividing the daily total number of COVID-19-related posts by the daily total number of published posts in the samples (Table 1, Figure 1 ). Daily cumulative counts of confirmed COVID-19 cases in mainland China were obtained from press releases published by the National Health Commission, Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, and Guangdong Provincial Health Commission. Both daily series were plotted on a time trend diagram (see Figure 1 ). A total of 1101 Weibo posts pertinent to COVID-19 were identified. Table 1 shows the key word frequency in the published posts made by the random user samples in the study period. We found little evidence that Chinese netizens paid much attention to the outbreak before January 20 when the Chinese Government for the first time openly acknowledged that human-to-human transmission of the virus was happening and when China initiated nationwide reporting on the outbreak. 5, 6 Our data show that, following this date, attention to the outbreak quickly increased and has remained high over time. Particularly high levels of social media traffic also appeared around when Wuhan was first placed in quarantine (January 23-24, 8-9% of the overall posts), when a scandal associated with the Red Cross Society of China occurred (February 1, 8%), and, following the death of Dr Li Wenliang (February 6-7, 11%), 1 of the whistleblowers who was reprimanded by the Chinese police in early January for discussing this outbreak on WeChat groups. 7 See Technical Appendix for sample posts for each of these events. This study has its limitations. First, our data collection system is not able to capture social media posts that were filtered by Sina Weibo's interface or disappeared within the data retrieval intervals. Only 8 post-publication censored posts were detected among the random samples in the study period. The authors cannot completely rule out the impact of Internet censorship in China. Second, Weibo is only 1 of sev- *Key words may be occurring in the same piece of posts. Therefore, the totals in the numbers column will exceed 1101 and the totals in percentages column will exceed 100%. ** Percentage of the population of posts identified with at least 1 of the given key words (N = 1101). Limited Early Warnings to COVID-19 eral popular social media platforms in mainland China. This study does not cover other platforms, such as WeChat. Low levels of attention to the outbreak among Chinese citizens in early January may represent a missed window of opportunity to contain the outbreak. Given that the adoption of personal protective behaviors has been shown to be associated with trust in government and that large-scale social distancing measures have been put in place in many parts of China, 8, 9 ensuring that citizens are aware of the true severity of the outbreak in its early stages is likely to increase acceptance and compliance with prevention and control measures. Governments worldwide should take note of lessons learned in China and should more proactively communicate early warnings to the public in a transparent manner. Limited Early Warnings to COVID-19 Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness Wuhan Municipal Health Commission's situation report of the epidemic of pneumonia in our city Weibo reports third quarter 2019 unaudited financial results Assessing censorship on microblogs in China: discriminatory keyword analysis and the real-name registration policy Reality check for the Chinese microblog space: a random sampling approach Press conference of the National Health Commission high-level expert group regarding the pneumonia caused by the novel coronavirus infection Did Xi Jinping know about the coronavirus outbreak earlier than first suggested? Pandemic preparedness and response -lessons from the H1N1 influenza of 2009 Effective media communication during public health emergencies: a WHO field guide. Geneva: World Health Organization ICHF acknowledges salary support from the National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (19IPA1908208). This article is not part of ICHF's CDC-sponsored projects. This project was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee at the University of Hong Kong (EA260113). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare. This study does not represent the official positions of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the US Government. To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/dmp.2020.68