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Weekly patterns in sexual health information seeking exist in several languages, but not all. Public events like World AIDS Day significantly increased HIV searches, offering opportunities for health campaigns.

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Area of Science:

  • Digital Health
  • Public Health
  • Information Science

Background:

  • Weekly patterns in sexual health information-seeking exist in some languages.
  • The prevalence of these patterns across major internet languages and the impact of public events remain unclear.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate sexual health information-seeking patterns across ten major internet languages.
  • To analyze the influence of public events on sexual health information-seeking rates.

Main Methods:

  • Extracted Wikipedia HIV article hit data for 2015 across ten major internet languages.
  • Analyzed data for weekly patterns and correlations with public events.

Main Results:

  • Weekly patterns were confirmed in English, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, Russian, French, and German.
  • Weekly patterns were not observed in Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, and Malay.
  • Significant increases in HIV queries occurred during World AIDS Day and the Charlie Sheen announcement.

Conclusions:

  • Sexual health information-seeking exhibits language-dependent weekly patterns.
  • Public events demonstrably impact online health information-seeking behavior.
  • These patterns and event-driven spikes present opportunities for targeted public health campaigns.