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Tweets about hospital quality: A mixed methods study

Tweets about hospital quality: A mixed methods study . Felix Greaves Harkness Fellow, Harvard School of Public Health / Imperial College London fgreaves@hsph.harvard.edu @ felixgreaves. Co-authors / conflict of i nterest. Anthony Laverty Daniel Cano-Ramirez Stephen Pulman

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Tweets about hospital quality: A mixed methods study

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  1. Tweets about hospital quality: A mixed methods study Felix Greaves Harkness Fellow, Harvard School of Public Health / Imperial College London fgreaves@hsph.harvard.edu @felixgreaves

  2. Co-authors / conflictofinterest • Anthony Laverty • Daniel Cano-Ramirez • Stephen Pulman • KaroMoilanen • Ara Darzi • Christopher Millett DrPulman and DrMoilanen are founders of Theysay Ltd, a sentiment analysis spin off company from Oxford University

  3. Social media use is normal 81% of UK population use the Internet 61% use a social networking site Source: Oxford Internet Survey 2013

  4. We love describing things on the internet

  5. We compared ratings with traditional measures of quality Vs. Associations between Internet-based patient ratings and conventional surveys of patient experience in the English NHS. Greaves F et al. BMJ QualSaf. 2012;21(7):600-5.

  6. Cloud of patient experience Free Text Greaves F et al. Harnessing the cloud of patient experience: using social media to detect poor quality healthcare. BMJ Qual Saf.2013 Mar;22(3):251-5.

  7. A new trend: ‘Big Data’ and social media analytics

  8. Sentiment analysis

  9. (

  10. :(

  11. :)

  12. Sentiment analysis of patientexperience is possible Greaves F et al. Use of sentiment analysis for capturing patient experience from free-text comments posted online. J Med Internet Res. 2013 Nov 1;15(11):e239.

  13. NHS Insight dashboard

  14. Aims • To describe the frequency with which people are talking about hospitals on Twitter • To understand what proportion of tweets to hospitals are related to care quality • To examine whether there are associations between Twitter sentiment and other measures of care quality

  15. Methods • Collected the Twitter names of all English NHS acute hospitals in April 2012 • Collected all tweets ‘mentioning’ hospitals for 1 year • Qualitative analysis of 1000 random tweets • Automated sentiment analysis of all tweets • Compared with hospital quality metrics

  16. Results76 of 166 hospitals were on Twitter198,499 tweetsMean tweets per trust: 2647 Median: 796, range: 0 to 88169

  17. Time of tweets

  18. Mean: 508 tweets per dayMedian: 405Range: 62 to 3601

  19. Qualitative analysis –Most tweets aren't about quality All tweets: 47% were positive, 47% were neutral and 5.6% were negative. Tweets about quality: 77% were positive, 2% were neutral and 21% were negative .

  20. Interaction with staff Home from [@named hospital] after a weeks stay...we feel blessed to have been cared for by such an amazing team. Thank you [named ward] x At the [@named hospital] just had an operation on me foot. Outstanding care as usual, & the nurse has just made me a cracking cup of tea :-) [@named hospital] [named ward] - Disgusted with your treatment of my mother. Will be making huge complaints.

  21. Environment Be nice if this room had been cleaned before we got it. Blood filled cap from an iv on the bedside cabinet, unflushed toilet [@named hospital] Spent a night in [named hospital] with my son. Excellent care - spotlessly clean. Thank you [@named hospital] Don't suppose there is any chance of full english[@namedhospital] Been here since 3 yesterday no hot food or drink #poor

  22. Access/Timeliness [@named hospital] Thanks for squeezing me in with orthoptist[named staff member] today. Great service just so sad that waiting list for [named surgeon]so long :-( [@named hospital] where the waiting time is ridiculous waited 3hr yesterday, 3lots of bloods took, 2hrs so far today for a blood test again! Waiting at [@named hospital]- appointment was over 2 hours ago. can we get takeout delivered??

  23. Effectiveness / Safety [@named hospital]Yes pls. Main concern now is the doctor overprescribing. We worked out the error but vulnerable patient might not [@named hospital] Also looking at a scan from 2010 when u didn't get scanned until 2011 not good, wrong person, terrible, disgusting

  24. Multimedia [@named hospital] Cannot believe I have been served this for my 18 month old. Tastes disgusting and hardly nutritional [permission obtained to use]

  25. People can be rude [@named hospital] [Named chief executive] should come down onto the wards n see what's really going on under her nose. I wish my nan was in [another hospital] [@named hospital] Shit on floor wet sheets, visitors having to change bedding, shit in toilet, ignorant staff- [name ward]!! Stay away !

  26. Twitter sentiment compared to traditional quality measures • Agreement 71%, Kappa 0.39

  27. Limitations • Only one way messages, not conversations • Ability of sentiment analysis approach • Sarcasm / Irony • Culturally specific • Vulnerable to external effects

  28. Like an angel

  29. Stank of urine

  30. Cup of tea

  31. Tweets about the NHS are affected by external factors

  32. Conclusions • Twitter is being used by patients to discuss care quality • But…it’s only a minority of the tweets • Signal at risk of being lost in the noise • Twitter may be more useful to drive quality improvement than understand comparative performance • Less about Big Data – more about small human stories

  33. Wider lessons from social media • A powerful tool for spreading ideas • Allows crowdsourcing information • Flattens hierarchies • Allows new approaches to patient engagement

  34. Caution… • Self selecting • Fickle • New ethical questions • Reality vs. hype

  35. @felixgreaves fgreaves@hsph.harvard.edu

  36. What affects the public’s decision about where to go to hospital

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