Measuring Network Dynamics of Opioid Overdose Deaths in the United States
Kushagra Tiwari, M. Amin Rahimian, Mark S. Roberts, Praveen Kumar,, Jeannine M. Buchanich

TL;DR
This study quantifies how social networks influence opioid overdose deaths in US counties using Facebook's social connectedness index, revealing significant social effects even after controlling for spatial and demographic factors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel measure, 'deaths in social proximity,' to quantify social influence on opioid overdose deaths using social network data.
Findings
Significant positive effect of social proximity on overdose deaths.
Robust results across multiple statistical models.
Social influence accounts for increased overdose risk in connected counties.
Abstract
The US opioid overdose epidemic has been a major public health concern in recent decades. There has been increasing recognition that its etiology is rooted in part in the social contexts that mediate substance use and access; however, reliable statistical measures of social influence are lacking in the literature. We use Facebook's social connectedness index (SCI) as a proxy for real-life social networks across diverse spatial regions that help quantify social connectivity across different spatial units. This is a measure of the relative probability of connections between localities that offers a unique lens to understand the effects of social networks on health outcomes. We use SCI to develop a variable, called "deaths in social proximity", to measure the influence of social networks on opioid overdose deaths (OODs) in US counties. Our results show a statistically significant effect…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpioid Use Disorder Treatment · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
