Skip to main content

Social media used to track harmful side effects of narcotics medication

social media narcotics side effects medication
Guian Bolisay/Flickr
Social media is often blamed for depression, unhappiness, and for creating an illusion of lifestyles that aren’t “real.” However, researchers are finding that various social media platforms provide a wealth of useful data that even the people using them might not recognize. Most recently, medical researchers led by Cedars-Sinai Center for Outcomes Research and Education (CORE) in Los Angeles tracked social media data to study harmful side effects of narcotics medication that patients often take for pain.

During the study, according to News Medical, the research team tracked more than 2 billion tweets and posts on social media platforms such as Twitter, AskaPatient.com, and PatientsLikeMe.com to uncover data that isn’t usually available through traditional clinical research. Researchers examined keywords such as “pain meds,”  “bloating,” “diarrhea,” “hydrocodone,” and “oxycodone,” in 2.5 million tweets and 217,000 posts. They also reviewed 1.8 billion posts from a data service, Treato, which indexes content from health-related websites.

Recommended Videos

There were limitations to the study, such as the inability to determine if more than one person posted the same information on multiple social media platforms, and without the availability of demographics, the data retrieved couldn’t be linked to any specific group.

Still, the data revealed an important concern that doctors aren’t warning patients who are prescribed narcotics for pain, of potential side effects. According to Dr. Brennan Spiegel, director of Cedars-Sinai Health Services Research and CORE, “These types of insights provide a blueprint for how to do better. By informing doctors and prescribers about these results, we can hopefully improve the communication and shared decision-making between doctor and patient around pain medications.”

While researchers believe the study is the first to analyze social media data to track gastrointestinal side effects of narcotics, it isn’t the first time tweets and online posts have been examined for medical research. Most recently, social media data and hashtags were analyzed to follow underage drinking, patient care and comfort during MRI scans, and preventing the spread of foodborne illnesses.

Christina Majaski
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Christina has written for print and online publications since 2003. In her spare time, she wastes an exorbitant amount of…
Coca Cola gives up on social media advertising entirely
Coke Bottle Cap Red Background

Coca Cola said Friday that it will be removing its millions of dollars in advertising from all social media platforms completely for the next 30 days. The company said the move is not part of the growing number of advertisers boycotting Facebook over its content moderation policies, but "time to reassess our advertising policies to determine whether revisions are needed."

“There is no place for racism in the world and there is no place for racism on social media,” said Coca Cola CEO and Chairman James Quincey in a statement to CNBC.

Read more
Justice Department proposes rolling back protections for social media platforms
what is section 230 the legislation protecting social media image

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has proposed rolling back the protections that social media platforms and tech companies have — a move that could make them legally responsible for what people post on their platforms.

These changes seek to make social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter better address content on their sites when it comes to what is acceptable and what should be taken down, according to the policy document released Wednesday.

Read more
Trump signs executive order targeting social media companies
President Trump Issues Executive Order Against Social Media Companies

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday targeting social media platforms, pushing to make them liable for content posted onto their sites, and ordering the Federal Trade Commission and the attorney general to begin investigating the companies.

"Today, I am signing an executive order to protect and uphold the free speech and rights of the American people," Trump said at the signing.

Read more