Table 2.
Sixteen stakeholders related to dietary sodium tweets and their 33 associated Twitter accounts.a
| Category, scope, organization/individual | Twitter handle | |||
| Public agencies | ||||
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Domestic | |||
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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) |
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United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) |
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International | |||
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Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (UN-FAO) |
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World Health Organization (WHO) |
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| Research and evaluation organizations | ||||
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Domestic | |||
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Harvard University (Harvard) |
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Stanford University (Stanford) |
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International | |||
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University of Oxford (Oxford) |
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University College London (UCL) |
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| Professional and advocacy associations | ||||
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Domestic | |||
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American Heart Association (AHA) |
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Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) |
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International | |||
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World Heart Federation |
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World Action on Salt (WASH) |
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| Experts | ||||
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Domestic | |||
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Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo |
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Tom Frieden |
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International | |||
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Simon Capewell |
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Alexey Kulikov |
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|
aFour stakeholders were chosen from each of the 4 categories: public agencies, research and evaluation organizations, professional and advocacy associations, and experts. Half of the stakeholders had domestic scope and the other half had international scope.