A Sentiment Analysis of Breast Cancer Treatment Experiences and Healthcare Perceptions Across Twitter
Eric M. Clark, Ted James, Chris A. Jones, Amulya Alapati, Promise, Ukandu, Christopher M. Danforth, Peter Sheridan Dodds

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 5 million breast cancer-related tweets to extract patient experiences and perceptions, revealing emotional trends and concerns about healthcare coverage through sentiment analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a machine learning and NLP approach to identify and analyze patient-reported outcomes from social media, providing new insights into patient experiences.
Findings
Positive sentiments about treatment and support
Prevalence of negative discussions on healthcare policy
Social media as a tool for patient experience monitoring
Abstract
Background: Social media has the capacity to afford the healthcare industry with valuable feedback from patients who reveal and express their medical decision-making process, as well as self-reported quality of life indicators both during and post treatment. In prior work, [Crannell et. al.], we have studied an active cancer patient population on Twitter and compiled a set of tweets describing their experience with this disease. We refer to these online public testimonies as "Invisible Patient Reported Outcomes" (iPROs), because they carry relevant indicators, yet are difficult to capture by conventional means of self-report. Methods: Our present study aims to identify tweets related to the patient experience as an additional informative tool for monitoring public health. Using Twitter's public streaming API, we compiled over 5.3 million "breast cancer" related tweets spanning September…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media in Health Education · Mental Health via Writing
