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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Jun 14, 2022
Date Accepted: Dec 14, 2022
Date Submitted to PubMed: Dec 22, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Prepandemic Antivaccination Websites' COVID-19 Vaccine Behavior: Content Analysis of Archived Websites

Kaplan S, Von Isenburg M, Waldrop L

Prepandemic Antivaccination Websites' COVID-19 Vaccine Behavior: Content Analysis of Archived Websites

JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e40291

DOI: 10.2196/40291

PMID: 36548948

PMCID: 9838720

Pre-pandemic anti-vaccination websites' COVID-19 vaccine behavior: A content analysis of archived websites

  • Samantha Kaplan; 
  • Megan Von Isenburg; 
  • Lucy Waldrop

ABSTRACT

Background:

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and concurrent development of vaccines offered the rare opportunity to study anti-vaccination behavior as it formed.

Objective:

Assess how anti-vaccination website content addressed COVID-19 vaccines

Methods:

Using a collection of 25 anti-vaccination websites curated by the IvyPlus Web Collection Program prior to the pandemic and crawled every 6 months via Archive-IT, we conducted a content analysis to see how these websites acknowledged or ignored COVID-19 vaccines. Websites were assessed for financial behaviors, mention of COVID vaccines, references to personal freedom, safety concerns, and skepticism of science.

Results:

The majority of websites addressed COVID-19 vaccines in a negative fashion, with more websites making appeals to personal freedom or expressing skepticism of science than questioning safety. Many of the anti-vaccination websites we evaluated actively sought donations and members. The content analysis also offered the opportunity to test the viability of archived websites for use in scholarly research. The archived versions of the websites had significant shortcomings and required supplementation with the live websites.

Conclusions:

In summary, we found anti-vaccination websites existing prior to the COVID-19 pandemic largely adapted their messaging to address COVID-19 vaccines. Our study also demonstrated the timely and significant need for more robust web archiving capabilities.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Kaplan S, Von Isenburg M, Waldrop L

Prepandemic Antivaccination Websites' COVID-19 Vaccine Behavior: Content Analysis of Archived Websites

JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e40291

DOI: 10.2196/40291

PMID: 36548948

PMCID: 9838720

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