Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020
There is a high level of knowledge on COVID-19, with most respondents aware of common symptoms and following preventative health measures. However, citizens face challenges maintaining social distancing recommendations when they need to purchase fo...
| Main Authors: | , | 
|---|---|
| Format: | Brief | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | 
        
      World Bank, Washington, DC    
    
      2020
     | 
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/884011604466023214/Social-Media-Monitoring-April-May-2020 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34739  | 
| id | 
                  okr-10986-34739 | 
    
|---|---|
| recordtype | 
                  oai_dc | 
    
| spelling | 
                  okr-10986-347392021-05-25T10:54:42Z Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 Ralston, Laura Ali, Rabia CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC IMPACT SOCIAL MEDIA JOB LOSS GOVERNMENT RESPONSE PUBLIC HEALTH LOCKDOWN GENDER There is a high level of knowledge on COVID-19, with most respondents aware of common symptoms and following preventative health measures. However, citizens face challenges maintaining social distancing recommendations when they need to purchase food and in their jobs. These challenges are more prevalent among lower income groups. Discussion on COVID-19 in social media spiked around the time large-scale social restrictions were introduced and common topics of conversation revolved around health care, food access, and job loss. Complementary survey data finds that these are citizens’ biggest concerns, over half indicated working fewer days, and about a quarter facing some level of food insecurity. While the overall tone in the discussions on social media and in online news sources has been moderating, the government handling of the situation is widely discussed, and survey respondents indicate concerns regarding social unrest and a wish for further government action. 2020-11-05T20:13:44Z 2020-11-05T20:13:44Z 2020-06-26 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/884011604466023214/Social-Media-Monitoring-April-May-2020 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34739 English Indonesia COVID-19 Observatory Brief;No. 2 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief East Asia and Pacific Indonesia | 
    
| repository_type | 
                  Digital Repository | 
    
| institution_category | 
                  Foreign Institution | 
    
| institution | 
                  Digital Repositories | 
    
| building | 
                  World Bank Open Knowledge Repository | 
    
| collection | 
                  World Bank | 
    
| language | 
                  English | 
    
| topic | 
                  CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC IMPACT SOCIAL MEDIA JOB LOSS GOVERNMENT RESPONSE PUBLIC HEALTH LOCKDOWN GENDER  | 
    
| spellingShingle | 
                  CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC IMPACT SOCIAL MEDIA JOB LOSS GOVERNMENT RESPONSE PUBLIC HEALTH LOCKDOWN GENDER Ralston, Laura Ali, Rabia Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020  | 
    
| geographic_facet | 
                  East Asia and Pacific Indonesia  | 
    
| relation | 
                  Indonesia COVID-19 Observatory Brief;No. 2 | 
    
| description | 
                  There is a high level of knowledge on
            COVID-19, with most respondents aware of common symptoms and
            following preventative health measures. However, citizens
            face challenges maintaining social distancing
            recommendations when they need to purchase food and in their
            jobs. These challenges are more prevalent among lower income
            groups.  Discussion on COVID-19 in social media spiked
            around the time large-scale social restrictions were
            introduced and common topics of conversation revolved around
            health care, food access, and job loss. Complementary survey
            data finds that these are citizens’ biggest concerns, over
            half indicated working fewer days, and about a quarter
            facing some level of food insecurity. While the overall tone
            in the discussions on social media and in online news
            sources has been moderating, the government handling of the
            situation is widely discussed, and survey respondents
            indicate concerns regarding social unrest and a wish for
            further government action. | 
    
| format | 
                  Brief | 
    
| author | 
                  Ralston, Laura Ali, Rabia  | 
    
| author_facet | 
                  Ralston, Laura Ali, Rabia  | 
    
| author_sort | 
                  Ralston, Laura | 
    
| title | 
                  Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 | 
    
| title_short | 
                  Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 | 
    
| title_full | 
                  Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 | 
    
| title_fullStr | 
                  Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 | 
    
| title_full_unstemmed | 
                  Social Media Monitoring, April-May 2020 | 
    
| title_sort | 
                  social media monitoring, april-may 2020 | 
    
| publisher | 
                  World Bank, Washington, DC | 
    
| publishDate | 
                  2020 | 
    
| url | 
                  http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/884011604466023214/Social-Media-Monitoring-April-May-2020 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34739  | 
    
| _version_ | 
                  1764481552462381056 |