
Sylvia Guendelman
· Professor Emerita, Community Health SciencesVerifiedUniversity of California, Berkeley · Community Health Sciences
Active 1981–2024
Research topics
- Information Retrieval
- Computer Science
- World Wide Web
- Medicine
- Data science
Selected publications
JMIR Research Protocols · 2020 · 24 citations
- Computer Science
- Information Retrieval
- Computer Science
BACKGROUND: Individuals are increasingly turning to search engines like Google to obtain health information and access resources. Analysis of Google search queries offers a novel approach, which is part of the methodological toolkit for infodemiology or infoveillance researchers, to understanding population health concerns and needs in real time or near-real time. While searches predominantly have been examined with the Google Trends website tool, newer application programming interfaces (APIs) are now available to academics to draw a richer landscape of searches. These APIs allow users to write code in languages like Python to retrieve sample data directly from Google servers. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this paper is to describe a novel protocol to determine the top queries, volume of queries, and the top sites reached by a population searching on the web for a specific health term. The protocol retrieves Google search data obtained from three Google APIs: Google Trends, Google Health Trends (also referred to as Flu Trends), and Google Custom Search. METHODS: Our protocol consisted of four steps: (1) developing a master list of top search queries for an initial search term using Google Trends, (2) gathering information on relative search volume using Google Health Trends, (3) determining the most popular sites using Google Custom Search, and (4) calculating estimated total search volume. We tested the protocol following key procedures at each step and verified its usefulness by examining search traffic on birth control in 2017 in the United States. Two separate programmers working independently achieved similar results with insignificant variation due to sample variability. RESULTS: We successfully tested the methodology on the initial search term birth control. We identified top search queries for birth control, of which birth control pill was the most popular and obtained the relative and estimated total search volume for the top queries: relative search volume was 0.54 for the pill, corresponding to an estimated 9.3-10.7 million searches. We used the estimates of the proportion of search activity for the top queries to arrive at a generated list of the most popular websites: for the pill, the Planned Parenthood website was the top site. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed methodological framework demonstrates how to retrieve Google query data from multiple Google APIs and provides thorough documentation required to systematically identify search queries and websites, as well as estimate relative and total search volume of queries in real time or near-real time in specific locations and time periods. Although the protocol needs further testing, it allows researchers to replicate the steps and shows promise in advancing our understanding of population-level health concerns. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR1-10.2196/16543.
Recent grants
NIH · $5.7M · 2011
NIH · $99k · 2004
Frequent coauthors
- 15 shared
Nap Hosang
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
- 13 shared
Dorothy Thornton
- 11 shared
Michelle Pearl
California Department of Public Health
- 10 shared
Miranda Ritterman Weintraub
Kaiser Permanente
- 9 shared
Lia Fernald
Berkeley Public Health Division
- 9 shared
Ndola Prata
Ocean Acoustical Services and Instrumentation Systems (United States)
- 9 shared
Maureen Lahiff
Berkeley Public Health Division
- 9 shared
Elizabeth Pleasants
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