Cresswell Liam, Espin-Noboa Lisette, Murphy Malia S Q, Ramlawi Serine, Walker Mark C, Karsai Márton, Corsi Daniel J
Obstetrics & Maternal Newborn Investigations Research Group, Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2022 Mar 29;11(3):e34421. doi: 10.2196/34421.
Cannabis use has increased in Canada since its legalization in 2018, including among pregnant women who may be motivated to use cannabis to reduce symptoms of nausea and vomiting. However, a growing body of research suggests that cannabis use during pregnancy may harm the developing fetus. As a result, patients increasingly seek medical advice from online sources, but these platforms may also spread anecdotal descriptions or misinformation. Given the possible disconnect between online messaging and evidence-based research about the effects of cannabis use during pregnancy, there is a potential for advice taken from social media to affect the health of mothers and their babies.
This study aims to quantify the volume and tone of English language posts related to cannabis use in pregnancy from January 2012 to December 2021.
Modeling published frameworks for scoping reviews, we will collect publicly available posts from Twitter that mention cannabis use during pregnancy and use the Twitter Application Programming Interface for Academic Research to extract data from tweets, including public metrics such as the number of likes, retweets, and quotes, as well as health effect mentions, sentiment, location, and users' interests. These data will be used to quantify how cannabis use during pregnancy is discussed on Twitter and to build a qualitative profile of supportive and opposing posters.
The CHEO Research Ethics Board reviewed our project and granted an exemption in May 2021. As of December 2021, we have gained approval to use the Twitter Application Programming Interface for Academic Research and have developed a preliminary search strategy that returns over 3 million unique tweets posted between 2012 and 2021.
Understanding how Twitter is being used to discuss cannabis use during pregnancy will help public health agencies and health care providers assess the messaging patients may be receiving and develop communication strategies to counter misinformation, especially in geographical regions where legalization is recent or imminent. Most importantly, we foresee that our findings will assist expecting families in making informed choices about where they choose to access advice about using cannabis during pregnancy.
Open Science Framework 10.17605/OSF.IO/BW8DA; www.osf.io/6fb2e.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/34421.
自2018年大麻在加拿大合法化以来,其使用量有所增加,包括在孕妇中,她们可能出于减轻恶心和呕吐症状的目的而使用大麻。然而,越来越多的研究表明,孕期使用大麻可能会伤害发育中的胎儿。因此,患者越来越多地从在线渠道寻求医疗建议,但这些平台也可能传播传闻或错误信息。鉴于在线信息与关于孕期使用大麻影响的循证研究之间可能存在脱节,从社交媒体获取的建议有可能影响母亲及其婴儿的健康。
本研究旨在量化2012年1月至2021年12月期间与孕期使用大麻相关的英文帖子的数量和基调。
参照已发表的范围综述框架进行建模,我们将从推特上收集公开的提及孕期使用大麻的帖子,并使用推特学术研究应用程序编程接口从推文中提取数据,包括点赞数、转发数和引用数等公开指标,以及健康影响提及、情感倾向、地理位置和用户兴趣。这些数据将用于量化推特上对孕期使用大麻的讨论方式,并建立支持和反对发帖者的定性概况。
渥太华儿童医院研究伦理委员会审查了我们的项目,并于2021年5月给予豁免。截至2021年12月,我们已获得使用推特学术研究应用程序编程接口的批准,并制定了初步搜索策略,该策略返回了2012年至2021年期间发布的超过300万条独特推文。
了解推特如何被用于讨论孕期使用大麻,将有助于公共卫生机构和医疗保健提供者评估患者可能收到的信息,并制定沟通策略以对抗错误信息,特别是在大麻合法化近期或即将到来的地理区域。最重要的是,我们预计我们的研究结果将帮助准父母在选择从何处获取孕期使用大麻相关建议时做出明智的选择。
开放科学框架10.17605/OSF.IO/BW8DA;www.osf.io/6fb2e。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):PRR1-10.2196/34421。