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Did the public attribute the Flint Water Crisis to racism as it was happening? Text analysis of Twitter data to examine causal attributions to racism during a public health crisis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Flint Water Crisis was a preventable public health disaster that predominantly impacted Black residents in Flint, highlighting systemic issues of racism.
  • A study analyzing nearly six million tweets related to Flint revealed a significant increase in mentions of race and racism as the crisis unfolded, correlating with major developments and increased media coverage.
  • Sentiment analysis indicated that tweets discussing race tended to have a more negative tone, suggesting a real-time public connection between the crisis events and racial issues, which could inform discussions about health disparities among minorities in the U.S.

Article Abstract

The Flint Water Crisis (FWC) was an avoidable public health disaster that has profoundly affected the city's residents, a majority of whom are Black. Although many scholars and journalists have called attention to the role of racism in the water crisis, little is known about the extent to which the public attributed the FWC to racism as it was unfolding. In this study, we used natural language processing to analyze nearly six million Flint-related tweets posted between April 1, 2014, and June 1, 2016. We found that key developments in the FWC corresponded to increases in the number and percentage of tweets that mentioned terms related to race and racism. Similar patterns were found for other topics hypothesized to be related to the water crisis, including water and politics. Using sentiment analysis, we found that tweets with a negative polarity score were more common in the subset of tweets that mentioned terms related to race and racism when compared to the full set of tweets. Next, we found that word pairs that included terms related to race and racism first appeared after the January 2016 state and federal emergency declarations and a corresponding increase in media coverage of the FWC. We conclude that many Twitter users connected the events of the water crisis to race and racism in real-time. Given growing evidence of negative health effects of second-hand exposure to racism, this may have implications for understanding minority health and health disparities in the US.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10798656PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42001-022-00192-6DOI Listing

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