Projects per year
Abstract / Description of output
BACKGROUND: Understanding physical and psycho-social illness trajectories towards the end of life can help in the planning of palliative and supportive care. With terminal patients increasingly seeking and sharing health information and support via social media, it is timely to examine whether these trajectories are reflected in their digital narratives. In this exploratory study, we analysed the Twitter feed of prominent cancer sufferer and physician, Kate Granger, over the final 6 months of her life.
METHODS: With the consent of Kate's widower, Chris Pointon, 1628 Twitter posts from @GrangerKate were manually screened. The 550 tweets judged relevant to her disease were qualitatively content analysed with reference to the six modifiable dimensions of the patient experience in Emanuel and Emanuel's 'framework for a good death'. The frequency of each tweet category was charted over time and textual content was examined and cross-referenced with key events, to obtain a deeper understanding of its nature and significance.
RESULTS: Tweets were associated with physical symptoms (N = 270), psychological and cognitive symptoms (N = 213), social relationships and support (N = 85), economic demands and care giving needs (N = 85), hopes and expectations (N = 51) and spiritual beliefs (N = 7). While medical treatments and procedures were discussed in detail, medical information-seeking was largely absent, likely reflecting Kate clinical expertise. Spirituality was expressed more as hope in treatments or "someone out there listening", than in religious terms. The high value of Kate's palliative care team was a dominant theme in the support category, alongside the support she received from her online community of fellow sufferers, friends, family and colleagues. Significant events, such as medical procedures and hospital stays generated the densest Twitter engagement. Transitions between trajectory phases were marked by changes in the relative frequency of tweet-types.
CONCLUSIONS: In Kate's words, "the power of patient narrative cannot be underestimated". While this analysis spanned only 6 months, it yielded rich insights. The results reflect theorised end-of-life dimensions and reveal the potential of social media data and digital bio-ethnography to shine a light on terminal patients' lived experiences, coping strategies and support needs, suggesting new opportunities for enhancing personalised palliative care and avenues for further research.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 17 |
Journal | BMC palliative care |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 22 Jan 2018 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Journal Article
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of '#Deathbedlive: the end-of-life trajectory, reflected in a cancer patient's tweets'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.-
-
Administrative Data Research Centre - Scotland
Klein, E. & Dibben, C.
1/11/13 → 31/10/18
Project: Research
-
SOCIAM: the theory and proctice of social machines
Robertson, D. & Buneman, P.
1/06/12 → 31/05/17
Project: Research
Research output
- 1 Article
-
Comprehensive scoping review of health research using social media data
Taylor, J. & Pagliari, C., 14 Dec 2018, In: BMJ Open. p. 1-8 8 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile
Activities
-
Advances in Social Listening for Public Health
Claudia Pagliari (Participant)
4 May 2021 → 12 May 2021Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in workshop, seminar, course
-
What's Happening in Global eHealth: Trends and developments during COVID19
Claudia Pagliari (Invited speaker)
8 Oct 2020Activity: Academic talk or presentation types › Invited talk
-
NHS Digital Academy Module on Citizen-Centred Digital Health
Claudia Pagliari (Lecturer)
2018 → …Activity: Other activity types › Types of Business and Community - Continuing Professional Development (CPD)/Training
Profiles
-
Claudia Pagliari
- Deanery of Molecular, Genetic and Population Health Sciences - Senior Lecturer in Primary Care
- Usher Institute
- Centre for Medical Informatics
- Global Health Academy
Person: Academic: Research Active