Published on in Vol 2 , No 1 (2022) :Jan-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/32452, first published .
COVID-19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube: Content Analysis

COVID-19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube: Content Analysis

COVID-19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube: Content Analysis

Journals

  1. Samuel L, Goodstein L, Basch C. Coverage of the 2022 infant formula shortage on YouTube: a conversation driven by news media. Journal of Public Health 2023 View
  2. Mello S, Glowacki E, Fuentes I, Seabolt J. Communicating COVID-19 Risk on Instagram: A Content Analysis of Official Public Health Messaging During the First Year of the Pandemic. Journal of Health Communication 2023;28(1):38 View
  3. Wu Y, Kuru O, Kim D, Kim S. COVID-19 News Exposure and Vaccinations: A Moderated Mediation of Digital News Literacy Behavior and Vaccine Misperceptions. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2023;20(1):891 View
  4. Corinti F, Pontillo D, Giansanti D. COVID-19 and the Infodemic: An Overview of the Role and Impact of Social Media, the Evolution of Medical Knowledge, and Emerging Problems. Healthcare 2022;10(4):732 View
  5. Smaha J, Jackuliak P, Kužma M, Max F, Binkley N, Payer J. Vitamin D Deficiency Prevalence in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19 Significantly Decreased during the Pandemic in Slovakia from 2020 to 2022 Which Was Associated with Decreasing Mortality. Nutrients 2023;15(5):1132 View
  6. Honcharov V, Li J, Sierra M, Rivadeneira N, Olazo K, Nguyen T, Mackey T, Sarkar U. Public Figure Vaccination Rhetoric and Vaccine Hesitancy: Retrospective Twitter Analysis. JMIR Infodemiology 2023;3:e40575 View
  7. Sarker A, Lakamana S, Liao R, Abbas A, Yang Y, Al-Garadi M. The Early Detection of Fraudulent COVID-19 Products From Twitter Chatter: Data Set and Baseline Approach Using Anomaly Detection. JMIR Infodemiology 2023;3:e43694 View