Automated classification of lay health articles using natural language processing: a case study on pregnancy health and postpartum depression.

TitleAutomated classification of lay health articles using natural language processing: a case study on pregnancy health and postpartum depression.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsPatra BGopal, Sun Z, Cheng Z, Kumar PKasi Reddy, Altammami A, Liu Y, Joly R, Jedlicka C, Delgado D, Pathak J, Peng Y, Zhang Y
JournalFront Psychiatry
Volume14
Pagination1258887
Date Published2023
ISSN1664-0640
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Evidence suggests that high-quality health education and effective communication within the framework of social support hold significant potential in preventing postpartum depression. Yet, developing trustworthy and engaging health education and communication materials requires extensive expertise and substantial resources. In light of this, we propose an innovative approach that involves leveraging natural language processing (NLP) to classify publicly accessible lay articles based on their relevance and subject matter to pregnancy and mental health.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We manually reviewed online lay articles from credible and medically validated sources to create a gold standard corpus. This manual review process categorized the articles based on their pertinence to pregnancy and related subtopics. To streamline and expand the classification procedure for relevance and topics, we employed advanced NLP models such as Random Forest, Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT), and Generative Pre-trained Transformer model (gpt-3.5-turbo).

RESULTS: The gold standard corpus included 392 pregnancy-related articles. Our manual review process categorized the reading materials according to lifestyle factors associated with postpartum depression: diet, exercise, mental health, and health literacy. A BERT-based model performed best (F1 = 0.974) in an end-to-end classification of relevance and topics. In a two-step approach, given articles already classified as pregnancy-related, gpt-3.5-turbo performed best (F1 = 0.972) in classifying the above topics.

DISCUSSION: Utilizing NLP, we can guide patients to high-quality lay reading materials as cost-effective, readily available health education and communication sources. This approach allows us to scale the information delivery specifically to individuals, enhancing the relevance and impact of the materials provided.

DOI10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1258887
Alternate JournalFront Psychiatry
PubMed ID38053538
PubMed Central IDPMC10694448