z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Tuberculosis and foreign-born populations in the United States: A mixed methods pilot study of media reporting and political identification
Author(s) -
Angel Desai,
Shravanthi M. Seshasayee,
Maimuna S. Majumder,
Britta Lassmann,
Lawrence C. Madoff,
Emily Cohn,
John S. Brownstein
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0230967
Subject(s) - tuberculosis , medicine , communicable disease , politics , refugee , foreign born , media coverage , family medicine , demography , public health , environmental health , political science , population , media studies , pathology , sociology , law
Background Media reporting on communicable diseases has been demonstrated to affect the perception of the public. Communicable disease reporting related to foreign-born persons has not yet been evaluated. Objective Examine how political leaning in the media affects reporting on tuberculosis (TB) in foreign-born persons. Methods HealthMap, a digital surveillance platform that aggregates news sources on global infectious diseases, was used. Data was queried for media reports from the U.S. between 2011–2019, containing the term “TB” or “tuberculosis” and “foreign born”, “refugee (s),” or “im (migrants).” Reports were reviewed to exclude duplicates and non-human cases. Each media source was rated using two independent media bias indicators to assess political leaning. Forty-six non-tuberculosis reports were randomly sampled and evaluated as a control. Two independent reviewers performed sentiment analysis on each report. Results Of 891 TB-associated reports in the US, 46 referenced foreign-born individuals, and were included in this analysis. 60.9% (28) of reports were published in right-leaning news media and 6.5% (3) of reports in left-leaning media, while 39.1% (18) of the control group reports were published in left- leaning media and 10.9% (5) in right-leaning media (p < .001). 43% (20) of all study reports were posted in 2016. Sentiment analysis revealed that right-leaning reports often portrayed foreign-born persons negatively. Conclusion Preliminary data from this pilot suggest that political leaning may affect reporting on TB in US foreign-born populations. Right-leaning news organizations produced the most reports on TB, and the majority of these reports portrayed foreign-born persons negatively. In addition, the control group comprised of non-TB, non-foreign born reports on communicable diseases featured a higher percentage of left-leaning news outlets, suggesting that reporting on TB in foreign-born individuals may be of greater interest to right-leaning outlets. Further investigation both in the U.S. and globally is needed.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here