Academic Journal

The Impact of COVID-19 in Depression in Arab Twitter Users

Bibliographic Details
Title: The Impact of COVID-19 in Depression in Arab Twitter Users
Authors: Areej AlZoubi, Ahmad Alaiad, Khaled Alkhattib, Ahed J Alkhatib, Aseel Abu Aqoulah, Mohamad Alharoun, Almo'men Bellah Alawnah
Source: Information Sciences with Applications. 2:19-32
Publisher Information: Sciences Force, 2024.
Publication Year: 2024
Subject Terms: History, Social Psychology, Economics, Macroeconomics, Social Sciences, Infectious disease (medical specialty), Psychological Language Analysis in Social Media, Virology, Pathology, Psychology, Disease, 10. No inequality, Applied Psychology, Depression (economics), Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), Outbreak, Computer science, 3. Good health, FOS: Psychology, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), Clinical Psychology, Impact of COVID-19 on Mental Health, Internet privacy, Medicine, 2019-20 coronavirus outbreak, Digital Mental Health Interventions and Efficacy
Description: Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is the greatest pandemic the world has witnessed in the modern era. This has caused suffering, disruption in the lives of millions of people. Method: We got 16581 Arab tweets, whether they express depression or not, and what symptoms they contain while keeping the time series of the tweets to monitor the 1439 Arab Twitter users during the two years 2019 and 2020. We determined whether the user was depressed or not, once in 2019 and again in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic period; to determine the impact of COVID-19 on depression for each user. Result: We have found that approximately 1.18% of users were classified with depression during the year 2019, compared to 36.69% of users who were classified with depression during the 2020 "during the COVID-19 pandemic," from a database of 1439 Arab users. Conclusion: Taking care of people’s mental health during this difficult period is very important, as some measures must be taken to preserve people’s mental health in countries affected by COVID-19. Feelings of fear related to COVID-19 can affect and harm mental health, causing depression.
Document Type: Article
Other literature type
ISSN: 2997-0873
2997-0865
DOI: 10.61356/j.iswa.2024.210473
DOI: 10.60692/et8xg-qhs24
DOI: 10.60692/zhn83-wz121
Rights: CC BY
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....f7727f2e7d5422b8a5b0ed1d1d11c89e
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:29970873
29970865
DOI:10.61356/j.iswa.2024.210473