University of Michigan School of Information
Study: Wellness influencers on Twitter more likely to oppose COVID-19 vaccination

Monday, 12/23/2024
By Noor HindiNew work by University of Michigan School of Information lecturer Elle O’Brien, Ronith Ganjigunta and UMSI assistant professor Paramveer Dhillon shows that wellness influencers were more likely to tweet messages expressing anti-vaccination stances during the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, “Wellness Influencer Responses to COVID-19 Vaccines on Social Media: A Longitudinal Observational Study” reveals higher rates of vaccination opposition among Twitter wellness influencers during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The paper’s goal, O’Brien says, was to better understand the role of wellness influencers online. Why do wellness influencers exist, why do they attract such large audiences and what void are they filling?
“One hypothesis is that wellness influencers serve as an alternative to traditional authorities like medical professionals and health scientists when trust in public institutions is low,” O’Brien says. “And indeed, we found support for this idea. Part of the role of being a wellness influencer may be to fill a void left over by diminished trust in traditional experts.”
Notably, about 50% of the wellness influencer accounts identified before the pandemic went on to post anti-vaccine messaging, which was about twice as frequent as a control group of accounts.
"They often shared posts urging followers to protect children from the harms of vaccines, or to oppose authoritarian government overreach,” O’Brien says.
O'Brien's interest in how the public forms attitudes on science began during her previous work as a neuroscientist. Now, she teaches in the Master of Applied Data Science program at UMSI.
“I'm really interested in how people present themselves as scientific, even if they're not engaging with research in the way that working scientists would,” she says. “And I’m interested in how people decide what counts as valid science when they might not have the specialized knowledge to fully understand it.”
Read “Wellness Influencer Responses to COVID-19 Vaccines on Social Media: A Longitudinal Observational Study” at the Journal of Medical Internet Research. The paper was authored by UMSI lecturer Elle O’Brien, Ronith Ganjigunta and assistant professor Paramveer Dhillon.
RELATED
Read more research from UMSI by subscribing to our free research roundup newsletter.
— Noor Hindi, UMSI public relations specialist