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The COVID-19 pandemic raised considerable challenges to obtain reliable guidance to help occupational health practitioners, workers, and stakeholders building up efficient prevention strategies at the workplace, between the constant increase of publications in the domain, the time required to run high-quality research and systematic reviews, and the urgent need to identify areas for prevention at the workplace. Social Media and Twitter, in particular, have already been used in research and constitute a useful source of information to identify community needs and topics of interest for prevention in the meatpacking industry. In this commentary, we introduce the methods and tools we used to screen relevant posts on Twitter. Twitter analytics is a way to capture real-time concerns of the community and help ensure compliance with the notion of social accountability. As such research has limitations in terms of exhaustiveness and level of evidence, it should be considered as provisional guidance to direct both actions at the workplace and further conventional research projects.

Original publication

DOI

10.1093/annweh/wxaa123

Type

Journal article

Journal

Ann Work Expo Health

Publication Date

03/05/2021

Volume

65

Pages

373 - 376

Keywords

COVID-19, Social Media, meatpacking industry, occupational exposure, workplace, COVID-19, Humans, Occupational Exposure, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Social Media