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      Social Media and Emergency Preparedness in Response to Novel Coronavirus

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      JAMA
      American Medical Association (AMA)

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          Coronavirus Infections—More Than Just the Common Cold

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            Evaluating the Potential Role of Social Media in Preventive Health Care

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              Is Open Access

              Evaluating the predictability of medical conditions from social media posts

              We studied whether medical conditions across 21 broad categories were predictable from social media content across approximately 20 million words written by 999 consenting patients. Facebook language significantly improved upon the prediction accuracy of demographic variables for 18 of the 21 disease categories; it was particularly effective at predicting diabetes and mental health conditions including anxiety, depression and psychoses. Social media data are a quantifiable link into the otherwise elusive daily lives of patients, providing an avenue for study and assessment of behavioral and environmental disease risk factors. Analogous to the genome, social media data linked to medical diagnoses can be banked with patients’ consent, and an encoding of social media language can be used as markers of disease risk, serve as a screening tool, and elucidate disease epidemiology. In what we believe to be the first report linking electronic medical record data with social media data from consenting patients, we identified that patients’ Facebook status updates can predict many health conditions, suggesting opportunities to use social media data to determine disease onset or exacerbation and to conduct social media-based health interventions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JAMA
                JAMA
                American Medical Association (AMA)
                0098-7484
                March 23 2020
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Penn Medicine Center for Digital Health, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia
                [2 ]Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia
                [3 ]Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovation, Washington, DC
                [4 ]Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
                Article
                10.1001/jama.2020.4469
                32202611
                631a7ab9-3abc-4bcc-96a4-eb108dfa9b61
                © 2020
                History

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