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A novel surveillance approach for disaster mental health.

Oliver GruebnerSarah R LoweMartin SykoraKetan ShankardassS V SubramanianSandro Galea
Published in: PloS one (2017)
We proposed a novel syndromic surveillance approach for mental health based on social media data that may support conventional approaches by providing useful additional information in the context of disaster. We showed that excess risk of multiple basic emotions could be mapped in space and time as a step towards anticipating acute stress in the population and identifying community mental health need rapidly and efficiently in the aftermath of disaster. More studies are needed to better control for bias, identify associations with reliable and valid instruments measuring mental health, and to explore computational methods for continued model-fitting, causal relationships, and ongoing evaluation. Our study may be a starting point also for more fully elaborated models that can either prospectively detect mental health risk using real-time social media data or detect excess risk of emotional reactions in areas that lack efficient infrastructure during and after disasters. As such, social media data may be used for mental health surveillance after large scale disasters to help identify areas of mental health needs and to guide us in our knowledge where we may most effectively intervene to reduce the mental health consequences of disasters.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • social media
  • health information
  • mental illness
  • health risk
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • drinking water
  • liver failure
  • risk assessment
  • patient reported outcomes