Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis

Objective: To compare the findings from a qualitative and a natural language processing (NLP) based analysis of online patient experience posts on patient experience of the effectiveness and impact of the drug Modafinil.Methods: Posts (n = 260) from 5 online social media platforms where posts were p...

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Main Authors: Julia Walsh, Jonathan Cave, Frances Griffiths
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Digital Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.598431/full
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spelling doaj-8cd13e77d08d472b8abcee8ab2d4586e2021-02-17T05:12:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Digital Health2673-253X2021-02-01310.3389/fdgth.2021.598431598431Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP AnalysisJulia Walsh0Jonathan Cave1Frances Griffiths2Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, United KingdomDepartment of Economics, University of Warwick, Coventry, United KingdomWarwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, United KingdomObjective: To compare the findings from a qualitative and a natural language processing (NLP) based analysis of online patient experience posts on patient experience of the effectiveness and impact of the drug Modafinil.Methods: Posts (n = 260) from 5 online social media platforms where posts were publicly available formed the dataset/corpus. Three platforms asked posters to give a numerical rating of Modafinil. Thematic analysis: data was coded and themes generated. Data were categorized into PreModafinil, Acquisition, Dosage, and PostModafinil and compared to identify each poster's own view of whether taking Modafinil was linked to an identifiable outcome. We classified this as positive, mixed, negative, or neutral and compared this with numerical ratings. NLP: Corpus text was speech tagged and keywords and key terms extracted. We identified the following entities: drug names, condition names, symptoms, actions, and side-effects. We searched for simple relationships, collocations, and co-occurrences of entities. To identify causal text, we split the corpus into PreModafinil and PostModafinil and used n-gram analysis. To evaluate sentiment, we calculated the polarity of each post between −1 (negative) and +1 (positive). NLP results were mapped to qualitative results.Results: Posters had used Modafinil for 33 different primary conditions. Eight themes were identified: the reason for taking (condition or symptom), impact of symptoms, acquisition, dosage, side effects, other interventions tried or compared to, effectiveness of Modafinil, and quality of life outcomes. Posters reported perceived effectiveness as follows: 68% positive, 12% mixed, 18% negative. Our classification was consistent with poster ratings. Of the most frequent 100 keywords/keyterms identified by term extraction 88/100 keywords and 84/100 keyterms mapped directly to the eight themes. Seven keyterms indicated negation and temporal states. Sentiment was as follows 72% positive sentiment 4% neutral 24% negative. Matching of sentiment between the qualitative and NLP methods was accurate in 64.2% of posts. If we allow for one category difference matching was accurate in 85% of posts.Conclusions: User generated patient experience is a rich resource for evaluating real world effectiveness, understanding patient perspectives, and identifying research gaps. Both methods successfully identified the entities and topics contained in the posts. In contrast to current evidence, posters with a wide range of other conditions found Modafinil effective. Perceived causality and effectiveness were identified by both methods demonstrating the potential to augment existing knowledge.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.598431/fullsocial medianatural language processingeffectivenesscausalitypatient experienceevidence-based medicine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Walsh
Jonathan Cave
Frances Griffiths
spellingShingle Julia Walsh
Jonathan Cave
Frances Griffiths
Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
Frontiers in Digital Health
social media
natural language processing
effectiveness
causality
patient experience
evidence-based medicine
author_facet Julia Walsh
Jonathan Cave
Frances Griffiths
author_sort Julia Walsh
title Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
title_short Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
title_full Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
title_fullStr Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis
title_sort spontaneously generated online patient experience of modafinil: a qualitative and nlp analysis
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Digital Health
issn 2673-253X
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Objective: To compare the findings from a qualitative and a natural language processing (NLP) based analysis of online patient experience posts on patient experience of the effectiveness and impact of the drug Modafinil.Methods: Posts (n = 260) from 5 online social media platforms where posts were publicly available formed the dataset/corpus. Three platforms asked posters to give a numerical rating of Modafinil. Thematic analysis: data was coded and themes generated. Data were categorized into PreModafinil, Acquisition, Dosage, and PostModafinil and compared to identify each poster's own view of whether taking Modafinil was linked to an identifiable outcome. We classified this as positive, mixed, negative, or neutral and compared this with numerical ratings. NLP: Corpus text was speech tagged and keywords and key terms extracted. We identified the following entities: drug names, condition names, symptoms, actions, and side-effects. We searched for simple relationships, collocations, and co-occurrences of entities. To identify causal text, we split the corpus into PreModafinil and PostModafinil and used n-gram analysis. To evaluate sentiment, we calculated the polarity of each post between −1 (negative) and +1 (positive). NLP results were mapped to qualitative results.Results: Posters had used Modafinil for 33 different primary conditions. Eight themes were identified: the reason for taking (condition or symptom), impact of symptoms, acquisition, dosage, side effects, other interventions tried or compared to, effectiveness of Modafinil, and quality of life outcomes. Posters reported perceived effectiveness as follows: 68% positive, 12% mixed, 18% negative. Our classification was consistent with poster ratings. Of the most frequent 100 keywords/keyterms identified by term extraction 88/100 keywords and 84/100 keyterms mapped directly to the eight themes. Seven keyterms indicated negation and temporal states. Sentiment was as follows 72% positive sentiment 4% neutral 24% negative. Matching of sentiment between the qualitative and NLP methods was accurate in 64.2% of posts. If we allow for one category difference matching was accurate in 85% of posts.Conclusions: User generated patient experience is a rich resource for evaluating real world effectiveness, understanding patient perspectives, and identifying research gaps. Both methods successfully identified the entities and topics contained in the posts. In contrast to current evidence, posters with a wide range of other conditions found Modafinil effective. Perceived causality and effectiveness were identified by both methods demonstrating the potential to augment existing knowledge.
topic social media
natural language processing
effectiveness
causality
patient experience
evidence-based medicine
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.598431/full
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