Abstract
The current study sought to characterize commentary regarding intimate partner violence during the COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic via the Twitter hashtags #DomesticAbuse and #DomesticViolence. A sample of 481 original, English-language tweets containing the hashtag #DomesticAbuse or #DomesticViolence posted across five consecutive weekdays from March 22 to March 27, 2020—during which many places were enacting lockdown mandates—was examined using thematic content analyses. Overall, Twitter users commented on potential increased rates of IPV, while adding details about abuse tactics that could be employed by perpetrators during the pandemic. Additionally, Twitter users disclosed personal experiences of IPV victimization. Four themes were identified, including (1) type of domestic violence (i.e. whether the violence was COVID-specific or general domestic violence), (2) commentary about IPV (i.e. general reflections, decentralizing and centralizing survivorhood), (3) perpetrator tactic (i.e. abuse tactic used by the perpetrator), and (4) institutions responsible (i.e. institutions responsible for providing services to survivors). Overall, the commentary on Twitter reflected an effort to raise awareness and share informational aid for potential victims/survivors of IPV. Data highlight the potential of social media networks in conveniently facilitating the sharing and spreading of useful resources to other users. Future research should examine whether resources shared via Twitter reach individuals who need them and empower individuals to garner support.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious public health concern. IPV is defined as abuse or aggression that occurs within a romantic relationship and may include physical, verbal, and sexual tactics.1,2 Although anyone can experience or engage in IPV, and some relationships include bi-directional engagement in aggression, men engage in higher rates of physical IPV against women. 3 Women also report high rates of physical and sexual IPV victimization. 4 Approximately, 30% of ever-partnered women will experience IPV in their lifetime. 5 Experiencing IPV is associated with numerous negative consequences including changes in psychosocial functioning (i.e. missing work, responsibilities), physical injuries, emotional distress, and suicidal thoughts and attempts. 6 Global crises such as conflict and natural disasters have the potential to increase IPV.7–10 In the current study, the term IPV is used instead of domestic violence to be more inclusive of violence occurring between romantic partners who may or may not be living in the same household.
Scholars examining the gendered impact of pandemics have highlighted the potential for increased IPV risk among women during global health crises. 11 In March of 2020, the COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic resulted in numerous changes in the daily routines of individuals across the globe. Early in the pandemic, many countries—including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia—suggested that individuals remain at home to slow the spread of the virus. Globally, governmental bodies issued mandatory “lockdowns,” recommending that individuals only leave their homes for necessities (i.e. groceries, medical appointments). Public health researchers quickly raised concern that increased time within the home, coupled with increased stress and prohibitions from leaving the home, could increase risk for IPV,12–15 and raised a call for research to understand the impact of movement related restrictions on the occurrence of IPV. 16
Data on the prevalence of IPV during COVID-19 is still accumulating. Boserup and colleagues estimate a 10–20% increase in domestic violence in areas such as New York City and San Antonio and a larger than 20% increase in domestic violence in Portland, Oregon, and Jefferson, Alabama. A survey conducted by Jetelina et al. 17 among 2,411 adults in the United States found that 54% of respondents who reported IPV indicated that the severity of the experience remained the same during the pandemic, whereas 17% indicated that it worsened. Gosangi et al. 18 also found that there was an increase in the severity of physical IPV during COVID-19 relative to IPV severity across three prior years. Moreover, results from a systematic review and meta-analyses revealed a moderate to strong increase in domestic violence between pre- and post-lockdown periods. 19 This increase in domestic violence was also observed in other countries including Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Ireland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. 20
Whereas other studies report comparable rates of IPV prior to the pandemic and during the pandemic,21,22 experts also raise concern that limitation in movement during the pandemic would result in difficulties linking victims of IPV with support services.23,24 For example, Lindberg et al. 25 indicate that 33% of women who reported experiences of IPV in early 2020 had difficulty seeking services in response to an experience of IPV. This is concerning, given data collected by Buttell et al. 26 over 10 weeks in April of 2020, which found that individuals experiencing IPV during this time period reported significantly less resilience and greater perceived stress than those not experiencing IPV during this early time in the pandemic.
In response to growing concern regarding the intersection of COVID-19 and IPV, several countries launched IPV prevention measures which might be useful to mitigate the increased risk for harm.27,28 Medical professionals also articulated ways that providers could proactively screen for IPV and link victims to care during the pandemic. 29 For example, in a commentary discussing methods for addressing IPV screening challenges within populations in Veteran Affairs in the United States, Rossi et al. 30 highlight the potential for using social media as a means for reaching out to individuals who might be impacted by IPV to ensure that individuals have access to education on increased risk as well as available resources. Nair and Banjeree 31 also call attention to the utility of digital media as a means for raising awareness regarding IPV resources during the pandemic.
Twitter is a social media platform in which users can tweet original messages as well as retweet (i.e. share) other users’ messages. Approximately 24% of adults in the US have a Twitter account, and nearly 50% of adults in the US ages 18 to 24 use Twitter. 32 Twitter is used as a platform to communicate, pose open-ended questions, and discuss ideas with others. Further, Twitter enables users to connect with others who share similar concerns, garner emotional support, and communicate with individuals who may be facing similar life challenges. 33 Notably, about 26% of Twitter users frequent the social media website several times a day and 20% report visiting at least once a day, meaning that information on Twitter can be disseminated widely and quickly across networks. 33 Researchers use the content of tweets posted on Twitter to gain an understanding of public sentiment surrounding current events, such as COVID-19. 34
Twitter may be an especially important platform for examining public sentiment regarding sensitive experiences, such as sexual assault or violence. Commentary regarding IPV and other forms of violence against women is particularly prevalent on Twitter. 35 Several studies now exist that utilize Twitter commentary as a way to characterize public sentiment surrounding interpersonal violence, including studies of the hashtags #MeToo, 36 #UsToo, 37 #ChurchToo, 38 #NiUnaMenos, 39 #MaybeHeDoesntHitYou, 40 #MenAreTrash, 41 and #NotOkay.42–44 Across these studies, researchers describe the ways in which Twitter users employed each hashtag to comment on disclosure of sexual assault (#MeToo), discuss the prevalence of sexual assault among men (#UsToo), raise awareness about sexual assault within religious institutions (#ChurchToo), draw attention to femicide in Argentina (#NiUnaMenos) and South Africa (#MenAreTrash), debunk myths pertaining to IPV (#MaybeHeDoesntHitYou), and raise concern about Donald Trump's disclosure of engaging in unwanted sexual contact towards women (#NotOkay). Notably, a recent longitudinal analysis of surveys assessing sexual assault over a period of 3 years among undergraduate women, which overlapped with the onset of the #MeToo movement, found evidence for an association between the #MeToo movement and recognition of unwanted sexual experiences as a form of sexual assault. 45 These findings suggest that individuals may use Twitter to rapidly gain support pertaining to sensitive topics, such as violence and victimization. Social media activities via Twitter may also facilitate change in how individuals conceptualize, label, and process experiences of violence. 45 The growing number of studies examining discussions of interpersonal violence via Twitter highlight the utility of examining sentiment regarding violence on social media.
Examining the Twitter commentary relating to IPV during the COVID-19 is a useful strategy for gaining a conceptual understanding of the context of IPV during this time in history. Notably, prior analyses by Xue et al.46,47 emphasize Twitter users’ concerns regarding the ways in which the global COVID-19 pandemic increased risk for family violence (including IPV, child abuse, and elder abuse), as well as rates of homicide, suicide, and mental health concerns. Additionally, Al-Rawi et al. 48 found significant differences in public discourse around COVID-19 on Twitter based on gender. Specifically, Al-Rawi and colleagues 48 found that while men mostly tweeted about COVID-19 death rates, women largely tweeted about the increased risk of domestic violence perpetrated towards women and girls due to lockdown mandates. It follows that analysis of tweets addressing IPV during the COVID-19 pandemic can be useful in understanding the types of IPV occurring during the pandemic, public sentiment regarding IPV during the pandemic, the tactics perpetrators utilize to engage in IPV, as well as strategies for holding perpetrators accountable for acts of violence.
Purpose of the current study
Whereas research addressing public commentary regarding interpersonal violence in general on Twitter is growing, additional research is needed in order to better understand the ways in which individuals utilized social media to discuss IPV during the COVID-19 pandemic. A limited number of studies to date have specifically examined discussion of domestic violence during the COVID-19 pandemic using data gleaned from Twitter. 47 One study focused on assessing children's exposure to violence during the COVID-19 pandemic. 49 Research by Al-Rawi et al. 48 highlighted gender differences in how individuals used Twitter during COVID-19 to discuss risk of violence as well as other harms. The studies led by Xue and colleagues46,47 were limited by collecting data up to three months after the pandemic was declared a global emergency (April to July 2020). The studies focus globally on consequences of COVID-19 on family violence and less on placing Twitter commentary within the situational context of lockdowns at the time they were being announced. Having a greater understand of the Twitter commentary (i.e. what people on Twitter are discussing) pertaining to IPV during COVID-19 lockdowns can help researchers gain a better sense of how Twitter communication can be used to (1) disseminate important information for interpersonal violence survivors and (2) identify people who might be at risk of domestic violence and could benefit from online targeted interventions. The current study extends prior work by exploring the following research question: How did Twitter users reflect on the issue of IPV during the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, when many places were enacting lockdown orders?
Methods
Data collection
Toward the goal of characterizing online discourse surrounding gender-based violence during a global pandemic, the present study explored Twitter data including the hashtags #DomesticAbuse and #DomesticViolence. These hashtags were “trending” during this time, and no other hashtags related to IPV appeared in the top 30 trending (i.e. widely used) hashtags at the start of data collection. Data were collected from Twitter's public application programming interface (API) via the Google Chrome addition NCapture, an extension of the qualitative coding software NVivo, at 2:30 PM ET across five consecutive weekdays (3/22/2020 to 3/27/2020). A five weekday timeline is commensurate with extant research on social media36–38,42,43 and enabled researchers to gather data during a period of acute risk for victims (i.e. the first two weeks of lockdown orders in many places). Consistent with established best practices in social media research, all potentially identifying information was removed from the dataset prior to coding, 42 and example tweets were slightly re-worded to protect Twitter users from reverse-identification. 50 The study was considered exempt by the local Institutional Review Board.
Sample selection
Initial captures of Tweets including the hashtags #DomesticViolence and #DomesticAbuse resulted in a combined dataset of 63,793 tweets. To ensure that analysis highlighted the perspectives of a diverse array of Twitter users rather than celebrities, influencers, and politicians, all retweets—including all tweets that contained identical text, indicating that they had been copied and pasted—were removed from the dataset. The original content dataset consisted of 18,821 tweets. In-depth qualitative thematic analysis of Twitter data regarding gender-based violence have previously analyzed datasets ranging from 200 to 1000 tweets. Researchers thus selected a random sample by assigning each tweet a random value in Excel and retaining the 600 tweets with the smallest randomly assigned IDs. After removing tweets that were not written in English, did not include original user commentary (i.e. consisted of only a string of hashtags or a link), and were unrelated to conversations about violence, researchers retained 481 tweets for thematic analysis.
Collected tweets constitute a global dataset, originating from 39 countries. Overall, 38% of Tweets originated from the United States. In addition, 86% of Tweets originated from either the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom, each of which has a similar population rate of IPV and introduced lockdown orders within the same timeframe. The governments of the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada each announced the beginning of stay-at-home orders on March 23, 2020. The United States rolled out at-home directives on a state-by-state basis. By the end of data collection, 14 states had yet to issue formal stay-at-home directives. However, then United States President Donald Trump declared a national state of emergency on March 13th. 51
Data analysis
The coding team consisted of two expert coders working in interpersonal violence prevention, a consensus coder with expertise in social media analysis and sexual violence, and two senior researcher practitioners in trauma prevention and treatment. Best practices in deductive thematic analysis 52 and content analysis 53 guided our qualitative coding procedures. Researchers developed an a priori codebook based on what they expected to see in the data (guided by knowledge of literature and theory related to IPV and social media use), familiarized themselves with the data, assigned preliminary codes reflecting initial impressions of the content, and searched for patterns across the first 20% of tweets. After the initial reviewal of the first 20% of tweets, coders acknowledged that the codebook required more complexity to accurately capture the data. As a result, emergent subcodes were generated to capture the data more precisely. This combined a priori and iterative approach to coding of social media data is consistent with extant research on Twitter discourse related to gender-based violence.36–38,42,43 During the coding process, the team met regularly to review themes; defined and named them based on the conventions in the interpersonal violence research; and compiled a report of findings (Table 1). Integration of both a priori and emergent coding (i.e. hybrid indictive and deductive procedures) have been demonstrated to be useful in previous analysis of Twitter data.36–38,41–43 The current procedure enabled coders to focus on a preestablished research question (“How did individuals reflect on the issue of IPV during the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, when many places were enacting lockdown orders?”), associate observed themes with extant theory, fill gaps in the present understanding of a phenomena (i.e. public discourse surrounding domestic violence during COVID-19), and identify emergent themes that may differ from and supplement existing research.52,53
Example tweets by major theme and subtheme.
Consistent with examinations of social media commentary on gender-based violence,36,42 coders established an inclusion threshold of 4% (n = 19 tweets) for themes to be retained in the codebook. The cutoff enabled the coding team to retain critical commentary on institutional responses to domestic violence risk during the COVID-19 pandemic. Of note, Tweets were not coded mutually exclusively, so a single tweet could be categorized within multiple subthemes.
Coding resulted in four major themes and ten subthemes. Based on conventions in establishing interrater reliability, 54 the consensus coder set a minimum kappa of 0.61 for themes and subthemes. If a theme or subtheme failed to meet a threshold rating of substantial (0.61), coders met as a group to discuss areas of disagreement, concretely operationalize a code, and review codes to resolve discrepancies. Resulting kappas thus ranged from 0.82 to 0.91 across major themes and 0.72 to 0.93 across subthemes (i.e. substantial to almost perfect). Descriptive analysis of emergent themes, presented in Table 1, include measures of frequency (count and percent) to standardize what constitutes a normative response. 55
Results
Among 481 tweets included across the #DomesticViolence and #DomesticAbuse datasets, four overarching themes emerged, including (1) type of domestic violence (i.e. described whether domestic violence was COVID specific or described general domestic violence), (2) domestic violence commentary (i.e. user's commentary including general reflections, decentralizing and centralizing survivorhood), (3) perpetrator tactic (i.e. abuse tactic used by the perpetrator), and (4) institutions responsible (i.e. institutions responsible for providing services to survivors of domestic violence). The four major themes and ten emergent subthemes, as well as affiliated example Tweets, are described and operationalized in Table 1. It is important to note that tweets were not coded beneath mutually exclusive themes. Each tweet could include several of the emergent themes and subthemes. Additional tweets from each major theme are included in the text below. Of note, 60 of the full sample of 481 tweets were directed at another Twitter user. Consistent with best-practices in ethical web research, and to protect Twitter users from possible reverse-identification, all Tweets have been slightly edited to ensure Twitter user confidentiality. 50 Inter-rater reliability ranged from moderate to almost perfect, with a Cohen's kappa of 0.82 to 0.91 across major themes, and a Cohen's kappa of 0.72 and 0.93 across subthemes. Percentages included below indicate the proportion of tweets in the overall dataset characterized as a given theme.
Theme #1: type of domestic violence
The major theme of type of domestic violence (33.18%) addressed whether a user was describing COVID specific domestic violence (19.96%) or general domestic violence (14.61%). For example, one user shared, “#DomesticAbuse experts anticipate that rates & severity of abuse will increase as public officials & communities try to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus through imposing restrictions or asking individuals to ‘social distance’ or ‘self-isolate.’” Tweets also included details on how IPV might increase due to mandatory staying at home orders. Some users described isolation being a common domestic abuse tactic, “The #COVID19 outbreak brings new challenges for people living through #DomesticViolence. People who are self-isolating may not be able to escape abuse at times when they otherwise would be able to.” According to NVivo word frequency results, terms commonly included in Tweets coded under the COVID specific subtheme included home (n = 85), people (n = 84), victims (n = 75), help (n = 71), support (n = 68), please (n = 64), women (n = 56), and survivors (n = 53).
Theme #2: domestic violence commentary
Reactions to others’ domestic violence experiences also emerged as a major theme (30.83%)—subtheme reactions included (a) commentary on domestic violence (6.03%), (b) negative reactions decentralizing survivorhood (3.12%), or (c) positive reactions centralizing survivorhood (24.32%). The negative and positive reaction subthemes to domestic violence both included further reaction distinctions. For example, negative reactions included nested subthemes of distracting from domestic violence (1.73%) and egocentric responses focused on the users’ own feelings and needs and not on the survivors’ (1.87%). Word frequency results for tweets coded under the negative reaction subtheme included, men (n = 3), suffer (n = 3), feminists (n = 2), and hate (n = 2) suggesting that the responses were not centered on domestic violence but rather on other problems that were often distracting. One example tweet characterized as a negative reaction stated, “@User Another post today about #domesticviolence (in response to the advice about self-isolation) and again, the reader could assume it's only women who suffer! Check out my TED talk - I could write something more balanced?”
On the other hand, positive reactions included nested subthemes such as awareness raising (19.05%), call to action—commentary focused on calling other people to a specific actionable goal (3.2%), emotional support and gratitude—commentary focused on providing support to others suffering from domestic violence (2.49%), and informational aid—commentary focused on providing informational aid to others (7.97%). Word frequency results for positive reaction included help (n = 52), support (n = 52), please (n = 36), safe (n = 30), call (n = 22), family (n = 21), thank (n = 18), and resources (n = 15), indicating that responses in the subtheme were more focused on providing information and raising awareness. For instance, users shared, “#UpdateVirusCorona #COVID19 virus researchers have found that as people become restricted & workers forced to stay home 24/7 has accelerated #DomesticViolence. If you are in this situation or know someone in trouble don't wait to act. Act now. Start by talking to a close friend or doctor” and “Now more than ever we need to look out for the most vulnerable in our society; activists are calling on neighbors to be extra aware and vigilant of possible cases of domestic abuse.”
Theme #3: perpetration tactic
Perpetrator tactic emerged as a major theme (7.28%), with users sharing actual or expected strategies that perpetrators may use when perpetrating domestic violence. For example, one user tweeted, “abusive and controlling partners often use ‘loving’ acts to manipulate their victims. Occasional acts of kindness are a grooming strategy to maintain control and make a partner stay in the relationship.” Subthemes nested beneath perpetrator tactic included (a) isolation (5.27%), and (b) other abuse types (2.15%). Of tweets that described perpetrator tactic involving other abuse types (tactics used asides from isolation), common words included control (n = 11), economic abuse (n = 4), money (n = 4), coercive control (n = 3), threatening (n = 3), indicating that emotional and financial abuse were highlighted as additional perpetrator tactics.
Theme #4: institutions responsible for providing services
Institutions responsible for providing services also emerged as a major theme (5.06%), with users raising awareness about certain institutions as well as calling to action other institutions responsible for providing services. For example, “@User has pulled together FAQs for survivors of domestic violence. Please see their resources guides in the link below.” There were three types of institutions responsible including (a) law enforcement and government (1.32%), rape crisis centers (2.08%), and shelters (1.66%). Of tweets that focused on rape crisis centers, common words included support (n = 33), available (n = 13), call (n = 11), helpline (n = 10), services (n = 7), and community (n = 6), suggesting that disseminating information about resources was one of the primary goals of user tweets focused on rape crisis centers.
Discussion
In the present study, tweets including the hashtags #DomesticAbuse and #DomesticViolence were extracted from Twitter in late March of 2020, during the first two weeks of countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom enacting lockdowns. Tweets were collected as the #DomesticAbuse and #DomesticViolence hashtags began to “trend” (i.e. were widely used) on Twitter. Qualitative thematic analysis supported four overarching themes, including: (1) type of IPV (whether it was characterized as associated with COVID-19), (2) commentary regarding IPV (including general reflections, centralizing survivorhood, etc.), (3) perpetrator tactic (abuse approach), and (4) responsibility of institutions (institutions responsible for providing services for survivors). Advocacy and awareness raising were common in tweets across the four themes, with many tweets seeking to increase awareness of emergent risks, provide education and disseminate facts to inform the Twitter community, and mobilize the larger community and society toward minimizing risks and helping survivors.
Several notable findings were revealed in the thematic analyses. As expected, a third of the tweets captured were focused on (1) information related to IPV or (2) information specifically related to IPV during COVID-19. Users pointed out the ways that COVID-related restrictions may increase risk for IPV, potentially exacerbating processes already known to increase abuse rates such as overall stress levels and economic strain. Indeed, past research following disasters and related events have tracked spikes in domestic violence following hurricanes, oil spills, earthquakes, and brushfires7–10 and early in the pandemic, researchers began to call for allocation of resources to front-line workers and for promotion of adherence to IPV guidelines. 56 Future research is needed to understand whether conversation on social media reflected the ways in which the context and consequences of IPV may have shifted because of the intrapersonal, interpersonal, familial, and community-level changes that occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Perpetrator tactics, particularly as they may be enhanced by the circumstances of COVID-19, were also commonly discussed in sampled tweets. For example, tweets commented on ways that violent partners may use isolation (exacerbated by the pandemic and the stay-at-home orders in particular) to enhance control. Consistent with extant literature, users also commented on ways economic factors may be used to control domestic violence survivors. Economic abuse and financial approaches to coercive control are increasingly recognized factors in exacerbating domestic violence across the globe.57–59 The disproportionate impact of the pandemic on women's involvement in the workforce60–62 likely increased women's perceptions regarding the financial risks of leaving a violent relationship and may have increased the economic control that working partners were able to exert.
Nearly a third (30.83%) of the tweets involved commentary on current articles and events. It was notable that some tweets indicated that only men were perpetrators of IPV and only women victims of IPV. Findings suggest that it may be useful for public education campaigns to recognize ways in which individuals of all gender identities experience IPV. Additionally, some tweets sought to amplify the conversation regarding IPV and COVID-19, raise awareness, mobilize action, provide support and gratitude, and provide resources to those who might be experiencing IPV during the pandemic. Relatedly, calls to the police to address issues of IPV increased markedly during the spring of 202020,63 with communities evidencing persistence in the increased call levels. 64 It is likely that calls to law enforcement would have increased in the absence of Twitter. However, it is worth considering how social media platforms may have amplified awareness and influenced behaviors of both survivors and bystanders across the globe.
Finally, Twitter users engaged in efforts to raise awareness related to service provision to address IPV, highlighting the role and responsibilities of law enforcement, government, rape crisis centers, and shelters. Messages often focused on sharing resource guides and providing information about ways survivors might receive help, support, and services. Findings are notable considering research suggesting that consulting others may facilitate help seeking behavior among survivors of sexual assault.65,66 For example, an analysis of 435 rape victims found that consulting others about whether to report the experience is associated with increased likelihood of reporting to the police, even after controlling for other potential predictors of reporting. 67 More research is needed to examine the degree to which alternatives to law enforcement, such as crisis lines that involved mental health or medical support providers, have been used during the pandemic. Moreover, research should explore whether survivors who discuss their own experiences of IPV online consider that experience to constitute consultation. Research is needed to understand the impact that online social messaging may have on individuals, and whether they indeed benefit from the shared resources.
Limitations of the current research are generally related to reliance on publicly posted information. Due to the public nature of Tweets and best practices in Twitter research, we fully de-identified all tweets prior to coding. We were thus unable to draw conclusions about identities of individuals who shared the tweets described herein. However, future work can greatly benefit from taking an intersectional approach, as Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), poor, and rural women may be at particular risk for IPV during a pandemic due to aggravation of existing social inequities (for a related discussion, see West 68 ). Further, although NCapture does not enable collection of demographic information, certain social media analysis companies are indeed able to collect demographic data Twitter users share on public profiles. Moreover, latitude and longitude data may be mapped via GIS software to facilitate tweet “mapping,” identifying areas with particular resource, treatment, and prevention needs (i.e. red line districts, communities closer to a higher concentration of liquor outlets, communities with more adherence to traditional gender roles). 69 For information on the utility of GIS mapping to assess risk for violence, see: Reidy et al. 70 Intersectional analysis of Twitter data could further include collecting and coding data in languages other than English. By limiting Twitter analysis to English language tweets, scholars may be further marginalizing the voices of individuals at increased risk for IPV, who already face limited access to culturally informed services and whose experiences may not be represented by Twitter users who choose to tweet in English. For example, it is possible that non-English speakers in the United States without access to a domestic violence shelter may face an even greater imperative to seek services and support online given the absence of formal community support and prevention resources. However, this is difficult to assess without collecting and coding multilingual tweets.
Moreover, as privacy limitations precluded us from following up with Twitter users directly, we were unable to draw conclusions about the experiences of both people who shared tweets themselves and of individuals who may have read but not responded to tweets. Twitter has a character limit (280 characters), and the limit has an influence on what users can communicate. Twitter users may feel pressure to include only the most brief and salient details of their experience rather than being able to explain their thoughts in detail. Character limitations do not lend itself to in-depth analysis that is characteristic of qualitative research. Additionally, Twitter does not allow the collection of users’ demographic information. Although we generally know that Twitter users are younger, educated, and people of higher socioeconomic status, 33 we do not know any demographics information on the subset of users who Tweeted about issues related to IPV. As a result, we cannot draw any conclusions on the representativeness of users in the current study who contributed to tweets to the #DomesticViolence and #DomesticAbuse conversation. Future research should consider other social media platforms where survivors can garner support from others such as Reddit. Reddit offers users the ability to foster discussion among one another on topics such as public health 71 and similarly to other platforms. Reddit users can engage with the platform anonymously under user-created pseudonyms 72 although users can also create accounts in which they are identifiable. 73
It should also be noted that the hashtags #DomesticViolence and #DomesticAbuse were selected due to their popularity at the time. Other less popular hashtags were not included in the present analysis, and as a result, these data are not represented in the current analyses. Data collection occurred during the beginning stages of lockdowns across the country and thus lockdowns were not uniform across places. We did not track the specific location from each Twitter user and whether lockdown orders were in place at the time each Twitter user posted a tweet. For example, as of March 27, 2020 (final day of data collection) 14 states in the United States had still not issued mandatory lockdowns. 74 Data further included tweets from 38 countries outside the United States. Thus, not all tweets in the sample reflect the experience of someone living in a community that was impacted by lockdown restrictions. Lastly, since data was collected on weekdays, it is possible that we excluded users who would have tweeted about #DomesticViolence and #DomesticAbuse on weekends, evenings, or early mornings.
The present data highlight ways in which global stay-at-home orders related to COVID-19 increased the potential prevalence and impact of IPV. Findings from this investigation also highlight the manner in which individuals utilized Twitter to facilitate conversations, increase awareness, and disseminate information during the COVID-19 pandemic. Arguably, the use of social media to connect with others, increase awareness regarding social concerns, and disseminate resources is even more vital during a pandemic, when individuals may lack access to other sources of information.
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the participants in this study.
Conflict of interest
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Contributorship:
GL, KWB, & LMO researched literature and conceived the study. GL and RJM were involved in qualitative coding. All authors reviewed and edited the manuscript and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Ethical approval
The study was considered exempt by the local Institutional Review Board.
Funding
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; Training support was provided to Dr. Gabriela López (grant number T32 AA007459, PI Monti).
Guarantor
GL.
