| Literature DB >> 28832603 |
Gianluca Pellino1, Constantinos Simillis1, Shengyang Qiu1, Shahnawaz Rasheed1,2,3, Sarah Mills2, Oliver Warren2, Christos Kontovounisios1,2,3, Paris P Tekkis1,2,3.
Abstract
AIM: Social media (SM) can provide information and medical knowledge to patients. Our aim was to review the literature and web-based content on SM that is used by Colorectal Cancer (CRC) patients, as well as surgeons' interaction with SM.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28832603 PMCID: PMC5568334 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0183031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Studies included in the review.
| Author | Year | Social Media | Purpose | Findings | Concerns | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De la Torre-Dὶez[ | 2012 | A) use of SM in chronic diseases | Facebook 62% / Twitter 31.7% | Suboptimal doctor involvement | ||
| B) Credibility of information | 26% prevention issues | |||||
| Beusterien [ | 2013 | 2 forums for cancer patients | Impact of CRC in patient’s forum | Participants: | • Lack of formal knowledge | |
| Topic: | ||||||
| Cutrona [ | 2013 | Peer-to-Peer chat for cancer screening | Facebook 12.3% | CRC: most sharing experiences on screening via email (32%) | ||
| Email 12% | ||||||
| Other | Twitter 4.8% | |||||
| Portier [ | 2013 | Cancer survivors network | Topics & Sentiment analysis | Negative initial emotion predict sentiment change | Lack of automated, reliable tools to identify patients at risk | |
| Tsuya [ | 2014 | Cancer patients usage | • CRC do share info via SM | Analysis and content are strongly influenced by other media (e.g. television) | ||
| Park [ | 2016 | Credibility of information | • 76119 tweets | Only 2% of individual users are doctors | ||
| Xu [ | 2016 | Frequency of discussion according to cancer, race, gender | Increased tweeting and exposure during “awareness months” | CRC receive least Twitter attention | ||
| Crannell [ | 2016 | A) content of tweets by the US cancer patients; | Patients express themselves openly on SM and happiness is influenced by the type of cancer | CRC receive least Twitter attention | ||
| B) average happiness of patients | ||||||
| Lee [ | 2016 | CRC Twitter content and transmissibility of awareness campaign in Korea | Most tweets were spam and commercial | Transmissibility of the awareness campaign was questionable. Public health institutions and organizations must be involved in SM | ||
| Mc Donald [ | 2015 | Uptake and use by CRC surgeons in the UK | 37% LinkedIn | UK consultants poorly engaged with SM | ||
| 3.1% Twitter |
A: Patients; B: Surgeons; CRC: colorectal cancer; SM: social media
Fig 1Flow-chart of study selection for inclusion in the analysis.
Fig 2Comparison of the performance of the hashtag The number of tweets reached 16860 in the last months, compared with the 5001 recorded in the previous period. Participants in discussions including the hashtag were three times higher during the last months, with over 136 million impressions (almost 5 times more). The Mayo Clinic official account was the first in both Mentions and Impressions over the last months, followed by medical associations and Institutions. It is worth noting that eight out of ten accounts which were in the top list in terms of mentions during the last months belong to renewed CRC Institutions and Centres (e.g. Center for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC @cdc_cancer, Mayo Clinic @mayoclinic and @mayocancercare), Scientific Societies (American College of Gastroenterology ACG @amcollegegastro), and Scientific Journals (e.g. JAMA, @jama_current), whereas one belongs to a fundraising organization (Stand Up to Cancer @su2c) another one to a Pharmaceutical Company (Boehringer Ingelheim @boehringer). This suggests that, irrespective of who are the most active tweeters, the quality of the tweets can be Scientifically relevant and true[8]. (reprinted from Symplur LCC under a CC BY license, with permission from Thomas M.Lee, Co-Founder, Symplur, LLC, original copyright 2016, http://www.symplur.com).
Fig 3Comparison of the performance of the hashtag The number of tweets exceeded 32000 in the last months, compared with the 19637 recorded in the previous period. Impressions were three times higher over the last months, and involved participants almost doubled. In both time-frames, the most active tweeters included mostly private accounts and associations, but the latter increased in the last months. In addition, over the last months, the accounts of Scientific Institutions and Associations were the most mentioned and those with highest number impressions (reprinted from Symplur LCC under a CC BY license, with permission from Thomas M.Lee, Co-Founder, Symplur, LLC, original copyright 2016, http://www.symplur.com).
Fig 4Comparison of the performance of the hashtag Even for this hashtag the number of tweets increased (+200), but the overall impressions slightly decreased (-560000). Notably, the most active tweeters were experts in CRC and CRC Scientific Association in both time-frames. This can be justified by a reluctance of patients and individual users in sharing their experiences on rectal cancer, potentially due to shame of the investigations needed to obtain diagnosis (e.g. digital rectal examination) and signs of disease (e.g. rectal bleeding). There is room for improvement for a true holistic care of CRC patients, embracing their social life and feelings[4, 6]. (reprinted from Symplur LCC under a CC BY license, with permission from Thomas M.Lee, Co-Founder, Symplur, LLC, original copyright 2016, http://www.symplur.com).