Colorectal Cancer Racial Equity Post Volume, Content, and Exposure: Observational Study Using Twitter Data
Chau Tong, Drew Margolin, Jeff Niederdeppe, Rumi Chunara, Jiawei Liu, Lea Jih-Vieira, Andy J King

TL;DR
This study examines how racial equity in colorectal cancer is discussed on Twitter, finding that expert and broker accounts play key roles in spreading such messages.
Contribution
The study identifies the role of expert and broker accounts in disseminating CRC racial equity content on social media.
Findings
Only 5.8% of tweets from CRC equity disseminators mentioned racially minoritized groups.
Broker accounts reached over 6 million followers, significantly extending the reach of equity-related content.
Expert accounts were more likely to post CRC equity tweets than nonexpert accounts.
Abstract
Racial inequity in health outcomes, particularly in colorectal cancer (CRC), remains one of the most pressing issues in cancer communication and public health. Social media platforms like Twitter (now X) provide opportunities to disseminate health equity information widely, yet little is known about the availability, content, and reach of racial health equity information related to CRC on these platforms. Addressing this gap is essential to leveraging social media for equitable health communication. This study aims to analyze the volume, content, and exposure of CRC racial health equity tweets from identified CRC equity disseminator accounts on Twitter. These accounts were defined as those actively sharing information related to racial equity in CRC outcomes. By examining the behavior and impact of these disseminators, this study provides insights into how health equity content is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media in Health Education · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Public Relations and Crisis Communication
