After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future.
Co-founder Victoria Martin is pleased to see this work continue under Wits' leadership. Victoria knows that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction.
We honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades. Meanwhile, La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA) continues independently at cila.comminitcila.com and is linked with The CI Global site.
Social listening in the context of vaccination entails mechanisms put in place to understand the information needs of people, their concerns, and the knowledge gaps they have in relation to vaccines - that is, social data. It also supports the tracking and response to online and offline misinformation, whose negative impacts have been widely studied - most recently during the COVID-19 pandemic, as studies such as this one show. But the need to listen to people before rumours spread like wildfire harkens back to earlier disease outbreak challenges - especially polio. This Drum Beat shares some resources, experiences, and strategies around the use of social listening in the context of polio, immunisation, and vaccines.
1.Vaccination Demand Observatory Launched in April 2021, the Vaccination Demand Observatory offers tools, training, technical support, and research to equip in-country teams to mitigate the impact of misinformation and mistrust on all vaccines. The effort to combat vaccine hesitancy worldwide is a collaborative project of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), PGP (The Public Good Projects), and the Yale Institute for Global Health.
2.Vaccination Demand Hub This global network of partner organisations works to understand why people miss out on vaccination, to improve acceptance and uptake of vaccines, and to ensure that people everywhere are protected against vaccine-preventable diseases. Co-chaired by UNICEF and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the Demand Hub offers a knowledge base of resources from organisations and experts across many disciplines. One of its 4 workstreams develops and shares tools and approaches that are designed to address misinformation and to strengthen digital engagement, including through the establishment of social listening systems and dashboards.
3.Social Data in the Polio Programme: Webinar This webinar drew on UNICEF's experience in collecting and using social data to strengthen social and behaviour change (SBC) in polio outbreak responses around the world. It provides examples from UNICEF country offices (COs) that have recently responded to polio outbreaks, as well as an overview of a set of rapid social data collection tools that can be used by COs and others. [Apr 2022]
4.Social Data and Polio Eradication: A Reference Guide This document from UNICEF gives an overview of the different types of data that can be collected for polio campaigns around the world and explains how these forms of data can be used for SBC work. It is a practical tool designed to help the practitioner go beyond immunisation data that highlight gaps in coverage, awareness, and refusals, toward a nuanced understanding of why children are being missed. [2022]
5.KAP Polls for Immunization and Polio Programmes: A Guide to Higher Quality In-person KAP Polls for C4D Managers This guide is built on the real-world experience of a knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) polling collaboration between UNICEF and the Harvard Opinion Research Program. Over the course of that collaboration, teams conducted more than a dozen polls across 8 polio- and immunisation-priority countries, the findings of which ultimately formed the backbone of the communication for development (C4D) strategies in polio. [2022]
The purpose of this event, which is organised by UNICEF Polio, is to share and discuss learning from polio communication on these themes: use of social data, misinformation strategies, and communication in conflict settings. It will be held both online and in person on December 4 2022 (the day before the formal commencement of the SBCC Summit in Marrakech). Click here for more information and to register.
6.Finding the Signal through the Noise: A Landscape and Framework to Enhance the Effective Use of Digital Social Listening for Immunisation Demand Generation by Sarah Cunard Chaney, Peter Benjamin, and Patricia Mechael Listening to people's perspectives on and concerns about immunisation can inform strategies to tackle vaccine hesitancy and encourage more people to get vaccinated. Social listening data collection tools range from artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning platforms to telephone hotlines, broadcast radio talk shows, and documentation of community dialogues. This report provides an overview of digital approaches to social listening for immunisation and proposes a framework with practical guidance for those seeking to use this approach to strengthen vaccine demand. The work was led by HealthEnabled in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, UNICEF, and the Vaccination Demand Hub. [Jun 2021]
7.Social Media Listening for Improved Vaccine Acceptance Organised by the Sabin Vaccine Institute, the Bay Area Global Health Alliance, and the Alliance for Advancing Health Online, this dialogue featured global health and communications experts sharing their experience using social media listening to drive programming decisions for improved vaccine uptake, specifically focused on minority and vulnerable populations. They discussed how they have used data from social listening to improve efforts to drive vaccine confidence and access. For example, Angus Thomson of the Vaccine Demand Observatory talked about the need to view social listening data through a behavioural and social science lens to understand what might be driving people's decisions. [Feb 2022]
8.Vaccines and the Social Amplification of Risk by Heidi J. Larson, Leesa Lin, and Rob Goble Vaccines provide fertile ground for questions, anxieties, concerns, and rumours, which appear in globalised hyperconnected communication landscapes and in the context of complex human (social, economic, and political) systems that exhibit evolving concerns about authority. This paper looks at the drivers, impacts, and implications of this landscape for vaccine initiatives, drawing on several historical and recent examples to provide a window for viewing new forms of social amplification of risk. Findings and insights were drawn from the Vaccine Confidence Project's decade-long monitoring of media and social media and its related research efforts. [May 2022]
9.Social Listening in Eastern and Southern Africa, a UNICEF Risk Communication and Community Engagement Strategy to Address the COVID-19 Infodemic by Silvia Sommariva, Jenna Mote, Helena Ballester Bon, et al. The characterisation of the COVID-19 pandemic as an "infodemic" has led institutions working on the response to further refine risk communication and engagement (RCCE) strategic plans and guidance to meet the challenge of a harmful overflow of information that can hinder risk perception and affect individual health decision-making. One such institution is UNICEF, which has been working in the Eastern and Southern Africa region with partners to gather insights on people's information needs to better inform and engage with local communities. This article describes the digital and nondigital social listening undertaken in the region and 5 of its countries to guide COVID-19 RCCE, including around vaccines. The analysis explores channels leveraged, types of data monitored, examples of social listening data use, and early challenges and lessons learned. [Feb 2021]
10.From Coverage to Empowerment: Integrating Gender in Immunization Demand by Ami Sengupta From UNICEF, this document features case studies from 6 countries that outline good practices in applying gender-responsive and -transformative approaches to boost demand and support vaccine uptake. For example, UNICEF Sudan used the Talkwalker application as a monitoring tool to capture the response to COVID-19 vaccine demand creation and service delivery efforts. Social listening highlighted that fewer women compared to men were engaged in online conversations regarding vaccines. In response, UNICEF produced tailored messages that responded to women's concerns about vaccine safety during pregnancy, breastfeeding, and menstruation and disseminated them through social media. UNICEF asserts that social listening informed gender-responsive messaging, provided a space for women's and men's concerns to be voiced, addressed vaccine hesitancy, and resulted in enhanced female engagement on social media. [2022]
11.Social Listening to Strengthen Vaccine Programmes through Chipatala cha pa Foni (CCPF) in Malawi To help boost COVID-19 vaccination rates in Malawi, VillageReach is working with the Ministry of Health to listen to the concerns of citizens, compile data about misinformation and information gaps, and inform data-driven response strategies to close those gaps. This approach to social listening is conducted through CCPF, a toll-free national health hotline that provides information and referrals through calls by trained health workers or recorded messages. The social listening analysis helps health systems prioritise responses to address information needs, gaps, and emerging misinformation and rumours.
13.Assessing COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy, Confidence, and Public Engagement: A Global Social Listening Study by Zhiyuan Hou, Yixin Tong, Fanxing Du, Linyao Lu, Sihong Zhao, Kexin Yu, Simon J Piatek, Heidi J Larson, and Leesa Lin Social media listening (infoveillance) can not only monitor public attitudes on COVID-19 vaccines but also assess the dissemination of and public engagement with these opinions. The researchers collected 7,032 social media posts mentioning the COVID-19 vaccine between June 13 and July 31 2020, when 5 COVID-19 vaccines started their Phase III clinical trials worldwide, from 5 global metropolises with high COVID-19 burdens. This process revealed a lack of confidence in vaccine safety, distrust in governments and experts, and widespread misinformation or rumours, especially in high-income countries. "More efforts are needed to build a more proactive public health presence on social media, and health systems should listen to tweets from the public to help inform policies related to public health response." [Jun 2021]
14.Inoculation Theory in the Post-truth Era: Extant Findings and New Frontiers for Contested Science, Misinformation, and Conspiracy Theories by Josh Compton, Sander van der Linden, John Cook, and Melisa Basol In the present "post-truth" era, inoculation theory may have a role to play in addressing contested science beliefs that can foment vaccine hesitancy, COVID-19 conspiracy theories, and other harms. Inoculation theory explains how an attitude or belief can be made resistant to persuasion or manipulation through pre-exposure to weakened forms of challenges. This paper considers the findings of work to date on inoculation theory in the face of threats posed by "alternative facts" and proposes new directions for inoculation theory research. [May 2021]
15.Ingraining Polio Vaccine Acceptance through Public Service Advertisements in the Digital Era: The Moderating Role of Misinformation, Disinformation, Fake News and Religious Fatalism by Qiang Jin, Syed Hassan Raza, Muhammad Yousaf, et al. There are many challenges associated with eradicating polio in Pakistan, including disinformation emanating from religious beliefs and the social-media-driven overabundance of misinformation and fake news based on myths about the polio vaccine in Pakistan. This research provides empirical evidence on the efficacy of risk communication strategies to address polio vaccine reluctance in the digital age. In short, the study finds that public service advertisements (in this case, on TV) are an effective tool to counter the inverse impacts of misinformation, disinformation, fake news, and religious fatalism. [Oct 2022]
16.How to Counter the Anti-vaccine Rhetoric: Filling Information Voids and Building Resilience by Federico Germani and Nikola Biller-Andorno This article discusses strategies to mitigate negative effects of online anti-vaccine content on public health, including by filling information voids and building resilience to vaccine misinformation through strengthened public health and digital literacy. For example, health organisations could work with trusted amplifiers, providing guidance on (i) how to communicate more efficiently - for instance, by using people-centred and emotional messages about vaccines; (ii) how to make the most efficient use of social media to increase outreach; and (iii) how create a network of influencers able to help each other address haters and bots. [Jul 2022]
17.Psychological Inoculation Improves Resilience against Misinformation on Social Media by Jon Roozenbeek, Sander van der Linden, Beth Goldberg, et al. Online misinformation continues to have adverse consequences for society. This group of researchers developed 5 short videos that inoculate people against manipulation techniques commonly used in misinformation and conducted 7 studies to test them. The videos were found to improve manipulation technique recognition, boost confidence in spotting these techniques, increase people's ability to discern trustworthy from untrustworthy content, and improve the quality of their sharing decisions. These effects are robust across the political spectrum and a wide variety of covariates, providing "evidence that these videos are effective not only in a laboratory setting but also 'in the wild' on a video sharing platform and can therefore be easily implemented at scale to improve resilience against misinformation..." [Aug 2022]
Facebook Integrity Research invites global social science researchers exploring misinformation, hate speech, violence and incitement, and coordinated harm to apply for funding (either US$50,000 or US$100,000, for a total of US$1 million) to support scientific understanding on how social technology companies can better address integrity issues on their platforms. Of particular interest to Meta: causal evaluations to understand the relative impact of interventions on people's attitudes, knowledge, and behaviour, as well as research including non-Western regions that have experienced a growth in social media platform use. Click here to learn more and to apply - prior to November 22 2022.
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