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Correction: General Audience Engagement With Antismoking Public Health Messages Across Multiple Social Media Sites: Comparative Analysis

Correction: General Audience Engagement With Antismoking Public Health Messages Across Multiple Social Media Sites: Comparative Analysis

For authors Katja Reuter and Jennifer B Unger, the affiliation: Institute for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research, Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States was inadvertently removed and replaced with the affiliation: Economic and Health Policy Research, American Cancer Society, Washington, DC, United States In the originally published paper, the full list of authors and affiliations read as follows

Katja Reuter, Melissa L Wilson, Meghan Moran, NamQuyen Le, Praveen Angyan, Anuja Majmundar, Elsi M Kaiser, Jennifer B Unger

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2021;7(2):e28131

Public Response to a Social Media Tobacco Prevention Campaign: Content Analysis

Public Response to a Social Media Tobacco Prevention Campaign: Content Analysis

To address this need, this study undertook a content analysis of public response to a semiautomated tobacco prevention campaign on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, which was described in detail in a technical paper by Reuter et al [15].

Anuja Majmundar, NamQuyen Le, Meghan Bridgid Moran, Jennifer B Unger, Katja Reuter

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2020;6(4):e20649

Public Concern About Monitoring Twitter Users and Their Conversations to Recruit for Clinical Trials: Survey Study

Public Concern About Monitoring Twitter Users and Their Conversations to Recruit for Clinical Trials: Survey Study

In the case of monitoring Twitter user data for clinical trial recruitment, multiple messages could be used to introduce the project and main purpose of the outreach, as described by Reuter et al [45]. Finally, the form of contact on Twitter (ie, public replies versus private messages) played a more important role for the HIV/AIDS, obesity, and HPV scenarios, where a noticeably larger portion of the respondents expressed some concern.

Katja Reuter, Yifan Zhu, Praveen Angyan, NamQuyen Le, Akil A Merchant, Michael Zimmer

J Med Internet Res 2019;21(10):e15455