(Press-News.org) A new artificial intelligence tool can scan social media data to discover adverse events associated with consumer health products, according to a study published September 30th in the open-access journal PLOS Digital Health by John Ayers of the University of California, San Diego, U.S., and colleagues.
The constant post-market surveillance of the safety of consumer products is crucial for public health and safety. However, current adverse-event reporting systems for approved prescription medications and medical devices depend on voluntary submissions from doctors and manufactures to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The rapid growth in consumer health products, such as cannabis-derived products and dietary supplements, has led to the need for new adverse event detection systems.
In the new study, researchers tested the efficacy of a new automated machine learning tool, “Waldo,” that can sift through social media text to find consumer descriptions of adverse events. The tool was tested on its ability to scan Reddit posts to find adverse events (AEs) of cannabis-derived products.
When compared to human AE annotations of a set of Reddit posts, Waldo had an accuracy of 99.7%, far better than a general-purpose ChatGPT chatbot that was given the same set of posts. In a broader dataset of 437,132 Reddit posts, Waldo identified 28,832 potential reports of harm. When the researchers manually validated a random sample of these posts, they found that 86% were true AEs. The team has made Waldo open-source so that anyone—researchers, clinicians, or regulators—can use it.
“Waldo represents a significant advancement in social media-based AE detection, achieving superior performance compared to existing approaches,” the authors say. “Additionally, Waldo's automated approach has broad applicability beyond cannabis-derived products to other consumer health products that similarly lack regulatory oversight.”
Lead author Karan Desai says, “Waldo shows that the health experiences people share online are not just noise, they’re valuable safety signals. By capturing these voices, we can surface real-world harms that are invisible to traditional reporting systems.”
John Ayers adds, “This project highlights how digital health tools can transform post-market surveillance. By making Waldo open-source, we’re ensuring that anyone, from regulators to clinicians, can use it to protect patients.”
Second author Vijay Tiyyala notes, “From a technical perspective, we demonstrated that a carefully trained model like RoBERTa can outperform state-of-the-art chatbots for AE detection. Waldo’s accuracy was surprising and encouraging.”
“By democratizing access to Waldo, the team hopes to accelerate open science and improve safety for patients.”
In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Digital Health: https://plos.io/4m85w0I
Citation: Desai KS, Tiyyala VM, Tiyyala P, Yeola A, Gallegos-Rangel A, Montiel-Torres A, et al. (2025) Waldo: Automated discovery of adverse events from unstructured self reports. PLOS Digit Health 4(9): e0001011. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0001011
Author countries: United States, India
Funding: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work.
END
New AI tool scans social media for hidden health risks
An artificial intelligence system called Waldo can spot personal reports of the harmful side effects of popular health products
2025-09-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Johns Hopkins researchers show novel immune system boost helps fight cancer cells
2025-09-30
In experiments with mouse models of breast, pancreatic, and muscle cancers, researchers at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital report new evidence that a novel means of boosting the natural immune system prevents cancer recurrence and improves survival.
The study, published Sept. 2 in Nature Immunology, was federally funded by the National Cancer Institute/NIH.
Malignant tumors are often described as immune-suppressive or “immune cold,” meaning the patient’s immune system does not recognize or attack ...
AI model for imaging-based extranodal extension detection and outcome prediction in HPV−positive oropharyngeal cancer
2025-09-30
About The Study: This single-center cohort study found that an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven pipeline can successfully automate lymph node segmentation and imaging-based extranodal extension (iENE) classification from pretreatment computed tomography scans in human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oropharyngeal carcinoma. Predicted iENE was independently associated with worse oncologic outcomes. External validation is required to assess generalizability and the potential for implementation in institutions ...
Frequent wildfires, heat intensify air quality issues in American megacities such as New York City
2025-09-30
Air quality in America’s largest cities has steadily improved thanks to tighter regulations on key sources of particulate pollution. However, increased heat, wildfire smoke and other emerging global drivers of urban aerosol pollution are now combining to create a new set of challenges for public health officials tasked with protecting millions of people on the East Coast.
Research from Colorado State University published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science begins to unpack and characterize these developing relationships against the backdrop of New York City. The research quantifies how existing particulate pollution from sources such as vehicle exhaust or consumer products are ...
Doctors and nurses are better than AI at triaging patients
2025-09-30
Vienna, Austria: Doctors and nurses are better at triaging patients in emergency departments than artificial intelligence (AI), according to research presented at the European Emergency Medicine Congress today (Tuesday) [1].
However, Dr Renata Jukneviciene, a postdoctoral researcher at Vilnius University, Lithuania, who presented the study, said that AI could be useful when used in conjunction with clinical staff, but should not be used as a stand-alone triage tool.
“We conducted this study to address the growing issue of overcrowding in the emergency department and the escalating workload of nurses,” ...
Scientists solve mystery of loop current switching in kagome metals
2025-09-30
Quantum metals are metals where quantum effects—behaviors that normally only matter at atomic scales—become powerful enough to control the metal's macroscopic electrical properties.
Researchers in Japan have explained how electricity behaves in a special group of quantum metals called kagome metals. The study is the first to show how weak magnetic fields reverse tiny loop electrical currents inside these metals. This switching changes the material's macroscopic electrical properties and reverses which direction has easier electrical flow, a property ...
Reaction-induced restructuring of CoOx species to control selectivity in propane dehydrogenation
2025-09-30
Propene is one of the most important basic petrochemicals widely used for the production of polypropylene, solvents, acrylic acid, etc. The conventional routes for the manufacture of this building block include steam or fluid catalytic cracking of different oil fractions, methanol to olefin and non-oxidative propane dehydrogenation (PDH). The PDH approach has been attracting increasing attention because of the shale gas revolution. This reaction is carried out on a large scale using highly expensive or environmentally unfriendly Pt- or Cr-containing catalysts. Co-based catalysts are of particular interest due to their excellent ability to selectively activate C-H bonds in various alkanes.
It ...
Beneath the ice: spring sunlight triggers photoinhibition and recovery in lake Akan Marimo
2025-09-30
The marimo (Aegagropila brownii), a nationally designated Special Natural Monument of Japan, inhabits Lake Akan in Hokkaido, where environmental conditions fluctuate drastically with the seasons. Of particular concern is the period immediately after ice melt in early spring, when low water temperatures coincide with strong sunlight, posing a risk of severe damage to photosynthetic activity.
In this study, a research team led by the Astrobiology Center conducted a detailed assessment of marimo photosynthetic performance during this critical transition period, combining field observations ...
12,000-year-old monumental camel rock art acted as ancient 'road signs' to desert water sources
2025-09-30
New findings highlight the pioneering role of human groups who lived in the interior of northern Arabia shortly after the hyper-arid conditions of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), guided by the return of seasonal water sources – and leaving behind a monumental legacy in rock art.
A team of international archaeologists, led by the Heritage Commission, Saudi Ministry of Culture, and comprising scholars from the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology, KAUST (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology), University College ...
Home-delivered nutrition services for older adults under the Older Americans Act
2025-09-30
About The Study: The findings of this qualitative study of home-delivered nutrition services for older adults suggest that home-delivered meals programs achieved their intended outcomes and yielded meaningful benefits beyond their stated purpose that remain to be quantified. The findings also support funding the Older Americans Act Nutrition Program.
Corresponding author: To contact the corresponding author, Kali S. Thomas, Ph.D., email kali.thomas@jhu.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.34747)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article ...
Electroacupuncture in patients with early urinary incontinence after radical prostatectomy
2025-09-30
About The Study: The findings of this randomized clinical trial show that electroacupuncture significantly accelerated postprostatectomy urinary continence recovery and may serve as a safe adjunct to standard care. These findings support integrating electroacupuncture into multimodal rehabilitation protocols to reduce early urinary incontinence burden.
Corresponding author: To contact the corresponding author, Xuefeng Qiu, M.D., Ph.D., email xuefeng_qiu@nju.edu.cn.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.34491)
Editor’s Note: Please ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Precision without incision: the new era of functional radiosurgery
University of Miami scientists launch accessible global climate modeling framework
Parallel atom-photon entanglement paves way for future quantum networking
Single-step battery cathode recycling
Farm conservation is an economical path to save Colorado River water
Feeling in control helps beat daily stress, researchers find
The Municipal Finance Journal joins the Chicago Journals program
Antarctic icefish rewired their skulls to win an evolutionary arms race
Moffitt study shows promise for new treatment in patients with leptomeningeal disease
CU Anschutz School of Medicine researchers identify new method for treating alcohol use disorder
Stowers Institute recruits renowned developmental and evolutionary biologist from HHMI’s Janelia Research Campus
Can digital health tools help younger cancer survivors better predict future health risks?
Scientists uncover room-temperature route to improved light-harvesting and emission devices
Intergovernmental platform on biodiversity issues an urgent call to stem decline of nature
New AI tool scans social media for hidden health risks
Johns Hopkins researchers show novel immune system boost helps fight cancer cells
AI model for imaging-based extranodal extension detection and outcome prediction in HPV−positive oropharyngeal cancer
Frequent wildfires, heat intensify air quality issues in American megacities such as New York City
Doctors and nurses are better than AI at triaging patients
Scientists solve mystery of loop current switching in kagome metals
Reaction-induced restructuring of CoOx species to control selectivity in propane dehydrogenation
Beneath the ice: spring sunlight triggers photoinhibition and recovery in lake Akan Marimo
12,000-year-old monumental camel rock art acted as ancient 'road signs' to desert water sources
Home-delivered nutrition services for older adults under the Older Americans Act
Electroacupuncture in patients with early urinary incontinence after radical prostatectomy
Exercise can help to restore the immune system of people with post-COVID syndrome
Radiologists probe aftermath of mass casualty terror attack
Brain & Behavior Research Foundation awards 165 Young Investigator Grants to advance mental health research
Advanced AI tool detects tiny brain lesions in children with epilepsy
Study finds altering one area of the brain could rid alcohol withdrawal symptoms
[Press-News.org] New AI tool scans social media for hidden health risksAn artificial intelligence system called Waldo can spot personal reports of the harmful side effects of popular health products