Literature DB >> 32584408

Assessment of Beliefs and Attitudes About Statins Posted on Twitter: A Qualitative Study.

Su Golder1, Karen O'Connor2, Sean Hennessy2, Robert Gross3, Graciela Gonzalez-Hernandez2.   

Abstract

Importance: Statins are prescribed to help lower cholesterol levels but have poor adherence rates. Attitudes or beliefs toward medications are important to ascertain because they may be associated with patient behavior. Objective: To identify health-related discussion in Twitter posts mentioning a statin and analyze the content within these posts. Design, Setting, and Participants: This qualitative study included 11 852 posts related to 1 of 8 statins (7 licensed for use in the United States and 5 licensed in the United Kingdom) collected from May 10, 2013, to August 28, 2018. Twitter posts were identified as health related or not, and if health related, whether they were posted by a statin user, someone who knows a statin user, a health care professional, or undetermined. The health-related tweets were classified by the type of information posted, such as a belief about the medication, an adverse event, a question, or a reference to the cost of the medication. Data were analyzed from January 22 to November 19, 2019. Main Outcomes and Measures: The number of posts by each user type identified and the categories identified by analyzing the content.
Results: Of the 11 852 Twitter posts about statins, 5201 (43.9%) were health related. The most frequent posts provided resource information, such as a link to a journal article (1824 of 5201 [35.1%]). The second most frequent type of health-related posts included personal beliefs or attitudes toward statins (1097 of 5201 [21.1%]). Personal experiences of adverse events (353 of 5201 [6.8%]), discussions about dosage (320 of 5201 [6.2%]), and questions about statins (191 of 5201 [3.7%]) followed. Posts indicated polarized beliefs and attitudes to statins from saving lives to causing death. Some beliefs, such as the direct confirmation that the use of statins mitigates the effects of an unhealthy diet, have not been extensively highlighted as common practice in the literature. Conclusion and Relevance: This qualitative content analysis of Twitter posts about statins provides insights into beliefs about statins. Patient perspectives gathered from social media may help to inform research and improve public health messages and communication between health care professionals and patients.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32584408     DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.8953

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Netw Open        ISSN: 2574-3805


  10 in total

1.  Active neural networks to detect mentions of changes to medication treatment in social media.

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2.  Areas of Interest and Social Consideration of Antidepressants on English Tweets: A Natural Language Processing Classification Study.

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Review 3.  Methods to Establish Race or Ethnicity of Twitter Users: Scoping Review.

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4.  SEED: Symptom Extraction from English Social Media Posts using Deep Learning and Transfer Learning.

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10.  Public perceptions and knowledge of cholesterol management in a multi-ethnic Asian population: A population-based survey.

Authors:  Chiw Yeh Lim; Jien Sze Ho; Zijuan Huang; Fei Gao; Swee Yaw Tan; Woon Puay Koh; Terrance Chua; Lip Ping Low; Huay Cheem Tan; Sungwon Yoon
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-08-13       Impact factor: 3.240

  10 in total

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