Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian-Origin Sanjay Gupta Second Most Popular Doctor In US: Twitter

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 May, 2016 11:46 AM
  • Indian-Origin Sanjay Gupta Second Most Popular Doctor In US: Twitter
With over two million followers, Indian-origin neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta has emerged as the second most popular doctor in the US, a study that analysed Twitter use by doctors across the country has found.
 
A neurosurgeon at Emory Clinic in Atlanta, Gupta is also a multiple Emmy-award winning chief medical correspondent for CNN.
 
Gupta's popularity is surpassed only by another TV personality Drew Pinsky of HLN who has 3.18 million followers in Twitter.
 
For the study, students at Augustana University analysed Twitter use by doctors across the US, going back to 2006. The researchers sorted through 4,500 users as part of their research.
 
"We just wanted to see how doctors are engaging with other people on Twitter,” one of the researchers, Paige Schwitters, was quoted as saying by Argus Leader, part of the US Today network.
 
The researchers found that the most followed Twitter accounts belonged to celebrities, public figures or TV personalities. 
 
With 1.03 million followers in Twitter Asa Andrew, certified internist and self-declared addictionologist, emerged as the third most popular doctor in the US.
 
Gupta joined CNN in the summer of 2001 and he has 2.03 million followers in Twitter.
 
"Gupta, a practicing neurosurgeon, plays an integral role in CNN's reporting on health and medical news for all of CNN's shows domestically and internationally, and contributes to CNN.com,” according to his biography mentioned in CNN.
 
"His medical training and public health policy experience distinguishes his reporting from war zones and natural disasters, as well as on a range of medical and scientific topics, including the recent Ebola outbreak, brain injury, disaster recovery, health care reform, fitness, military medicine, and HIV/AIDS,” it added.
 
Gupta uses his Twitter account primarily for professional use, giving his opinions and medical advice, according to the study.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Beware! A dead snake may also bite

Beware! A dead snake may also bite
"A snake's post-mortem movements are fueled by the ions, or electrically charged particles, which remain in the nerve cells of a snake for several hours...

Beware! A dead snake may also bite

Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!

Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!
This may sound and read unbelievable but there is an elderly man whose brain has no neural fibre connection between his two hemispheres!

Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!

How people's brains get synchronised during movies

How people's brains get synchronised during movies
Uri Hasson, a psychologist at Princeton University analysed brain scan data his team collected as people watched several different video clips....

How people's brains get synchronised during movies

Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!

Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!
Native to southern Africa, Mozambican tilapia fish use urine to reduce aggressive behaviour in other males, lure females to the nests that they make...

Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!

Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

Morning sex makes for a healthy start!
Mornings are not just perfect for jogging or quieter moments in the park. Try sex in the wee hours that will sure improve your otherwise dull and boring day like never before!

Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

How birds learnt to fly

How birds learnt to fly
Birds have an innate ability to maneuver in mid-air, a talent that could have helped their ancestors learn to fly rather than fall from a perch, says a study...

How birds learnt to fly