Park Hannah J, Scott Cassidy J, Smith Hadley Stevens, Wojcik Monica H
Division of Newborn Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Division of Genetics and Genomics, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Genet Med Open. 2025 Feb 4;3:102844. doi: 10.1016/j.gimo.2025.102844. eCollection 2025.
Social media provides an opportunity for the expression of people with rare conditions and may provide valuable insight into lived experiences to inform genomic care. Our objective was to describe the nature and content of rare disease video narratives on social media.
We reviewed content on a short-video-format social media website containing the tags of #raredisease, #raredisorder, or #raredisorders. Two authors independently coded videos for content matter and conducted thematic analysis using a mixed deductive-inductive approach. The demographic characteristics of the content and names of specific rare conditions were documented when available, as were the characteristics of the videos themselves.
We reviewed 500 videos created by 299 unique users and identified 6 major themes: Spreading Awareness, Guidance for Others, Intimate View into Life, Interactions with Health care, Responses, and Requests for Support. The video narrators were typically family members or caregivers (50.2%) or the person affected (46.6%); a small percentage were health care professionals (2.2%). People with rare diseases in the video comprised both children (40.6%) and adults (52.6%). A total of 189 rare conditions were mentioned, the most common being Ehler-Danlos syndrome (7.8%), Sanfilippo syndrome (1.8%), and narcolepsy (1.8%).
Our data suggest that video-format social media allows community building among people affected by rare conditions. Insights from narratives expressed in this format may contribute to a better understanding of medical experiences in the context of daily life, both positive and negative, fostering empathy and leading to improvements in genomic medicine practice.
社交媒体为患有罕见病的人提供了表达的机会,可能为了解生活经历以指导基因组护理提供有价值的见解。我们的目标是描述社交媒体上罕见病视频叙事的性质和内容。
我们审查了一个短视频格式的社交媒体网站上包含#罕见病、#罕见疾病或#罕见病症标签的内容。两位作者独立对视频的内容进行编码,并使用混合演绎-归纳法进行主题分析。如有可用信息,记录内容的人口统计学特征和特定罕见病的名称,以及视频本身的特征。
我们审查了299位独特用户创建的500个视频,确定了6个主要主题:提高认识、为他人提供指导、对生活的深入观察、与医疗保健的互动、回应以及寻求支持。视频讲述者通常是家庭成员或照顾者(50.2%)或患者本人(46.6%);一小部分是医疗保健专业人员(2.2%)。视频中的罕见病患者包括儿童(40.6%)和成人(52.6%)。总共提到了189种罕见病,最常见的是埃勒斯-当洛综合征(7.8%)、桑菲利波综合征(1.8%)和发作性睡病(1.8%)。
我们的数据表明,视频格式的社交媒体能够在受罕见病影响的人群中建立社区。以这种形式表达的叙事所提供的见解可能有助于更好地理解日常生活背景下的医疗经历,包括积极的和消极的,培养同理心并促进基因组医学实践的改进。