Japanese Perception of Brain Death and Implications for New Medical Technologies: Quantitative and Qualitative Social Media Analysis.

Xanat Vargas Meza, Masanori Oikawa
Author Information
  1. Xanat Vargas Meza: Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan. ORCID
  2. Masanori Oikawa: Department of Medical Ethics, Graduate School of Medicine, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan. ORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Brain death has been used to decide whether to keep sustained care and treatment. It can facilitate tissue, organ, and body donation for several purposes, such as transplantation and medical education and research. In Japan, brain death has strict diagnostic criteria and family consent is crucial, but it has been a challenging concept for the public since its introduction, including knowledge and communication issues.
OBJECTIVE: We analyzed data across YouTube and Twitter in Japan to uncover actors and assess the quality of brain death communication, providing recommendations to communicate new medical technologies.
METHODS: Using the keyword "" (brain death), we collected recent data from YouTube and Twitter, classifying the data into 5 dimensions: time, individuality (type of users), place, activity, and relations (hyperlinks). We employed a scale to evaluate brain death information quality. We divided YouTube videos into 3 groups and assessed their differences through statistical analysis. We also provided a text-based analysis of brain death-related narratives.
RESULTS: Most videos (20/61, 33%) were uploaded in 2019, while 10,892 tweets peaked between July 3 and 9, 2023, and June 12 and 18, 2023. Videos about brain death were mostly uploaded by citizens (18/61, 27%), followed by media (13/61, 20%) and unknown actors (10/61, 15%). On the other hand, most identified users in a random sample of 100 tweets were citizens (73/100, 73%), and the top 10 retweeted and liked tweets were also mostly authored by citizens (75/100, 75%). No specific information on location was uncovered. Information videos contained guides for accreditation of the National Nursing Exam and religious points of view, while misinformation videos mostly contained promotions by spirituality actors and webtoon artists. Some tweets involved heart transplantation and patient narratives. Most hyperlinks pointed to YouTube and Twitter.
CONCLUSIONS: Brain death has become a common topic in everyday life, with some actors disseminating high-quality information, others disseminating no medical information, and others disseminating misinformation. Recommendations include partnering with interested actors, discussing medical information in detail, and teaching people to recognize pseudoscience.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Social Media
Humans
Brain Death
Japan
Qualitative Research
Perception
East Asian People

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0deathbrainYouTubeactorsinformationmedicalTwittervideostweetsBrainJapandataanalysismostlycitizensdisseminatingtransplantationcommunicationqualityusershyperlinks3alsonarrativesuploaded102023mediacontainedmisinformationothersBACKGROUND:useddecidewhetherkeepsustainedcaretreatmentcanfacilitatetissueorganbodydonationseveralpurposeseducationresearchstrictdiagnosticcriteriafamilyconsentcrucialchallengingconceptpublicsinceintroductionincludingknowledgeissuesOBJECTIVE:analyzedacrossuncoverassessprovidingrecommendationscommunicatenewtechnologiesMETHODS:Usingkeyword""collectedrecentclassifying5dimensions:timeindividualitytypeplaceactivityrelationsemployedscaleevaluatedividedgroupsassesseddifferencesstatisticalprovidedtext-baseddeath-relatedRESULTS:20/6133%2019892peakedJuly9June1218Videos18/6127%followed13/6120%unknown10/6115%handidentifiedrandomsample10073/10073%topretweetedlikedauthored75/10075%specificlocationuncoveredInformationguidesaccreditationNationalNursingExamreligiouspointsviewpromotionsspiritualitywebtoonartistsinvolvedheartpatientpointedCONCLUSIONS:becomecommontopiceverydaylifehigh-qualityRecommendationsincludepartneringinteresteddiscussingdetailteachingpeoplerecognizepseudoscienceJapanesePerceptionDeathImplicationsNewMedicalTechnologies:QuantitativeQualitativeSocialMediaAnalysismultidimensionalsocial

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