Department of Medical Education, Children's National Medical Center, The George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, USA.
Med Educ Online. 2010 Sep 15;15. doi: 10.3402/meo.v15i0.5324.
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Today's medical students are learning in a social media era in which patient confidentiality is at risk yet schools' social media policies have not been elucidated. The purpose of this study is to describe the presence of medical schools on top social media sites and to identify whether student policies for these schools explicitly address social media use.
Websites of all 132 accredited US medical schools were independently assessed by two investigators for their presence (as of March 31, 2010) on the most common social networking and microblogging sites (Facebook and Twitter) and their publicly available policies addressing online social networking. Key features from these policies are described.
100% (n=132) of US medical schools had websites and 95.45% (126/132) had any Facebook presence. 25.76% (34/132) had official medical school pages, 71.21% (94/132) had student groups, and 54.55% (72/132) had alumni groups on Facebook. 10.6% of medical schools (14/132) had Twitter accounts. 128 of 132 medical schools (96.97%) had student guidelines or policies publicly available online. 13 of these 128 schools (10.16%) had guidelines/policies explicitly mentioning social media. 38.46% (5/13) of these guidelines included statements that defined what is forbidden, inappropriate, or impermissible under any circumstances, or mentioned strongly discouraged online behaviors. 53.85% (7/13) encouraged thoughtful and responsible social media use.
Medical schools and their students are using social media. Almost all US medical schools have a Facebook presence, yet most do not have policies addressing student online social networking behavior. While social media use rises, policy informing appropriate conduct in medical schools lags behind. Established policies at some medical schools can provide a blueprint for others to adopt and adapt.
背景/目的:当今的医学生是在社交媒体时代学习的,在此时代,患者的保密性面临风险,但学校的社交媒体政策尚未阐明。本研究的目的是描述医学院校在最常见的社交网络和微博网站(Facebook 和 Twitter)上的存在,并确定这些学校的学生政策是否明确解决社交媒体的使用问题。
两位研究人员独立评估了所有 132 所获得认可的美国医学院校的网站,以了解其在最常见的社交网络和微博网站(Facebook 和 Twitter)上的存在情况(截至 2010 年 3 月 31 日),以及其公开的在线社交网络政策。描述了这些政策中的主要特征。
100%(n=132)的美国医学院校都有网站,95.45%(126/132)的学校在 Facebook 上有任何形式的存在。25.76%(34/132)的学校有官方医学院校页面,71.21%(94/132)的学校有学生团体,54.55%(72/132)的学校有校友团体在 Facebook 上。有 10.6%(14/132)的医学院校拥有 Twitter 帐户。132 所医学院校中有 128 所(96.97%)的学校在线上提供了可供公开查阅的学生指导方针或政策。其中 13 所学校(10.16%)的指导方针/政策明确提到了社交媒体。在这些指导方针中,有 38.46%(5/13)的学校规定了在任何情况下禁止、不适当或不允许的行为,或提到强烈不鼓励在线行为。53.85%(7/13)的学校鼓励进行深思熟虑和负责任的社交媒体使用。
医学院校及其学生正在使用社交媒体。几乎所有的美国医学院校都在 Facebook 上有存在,但大多数学校没有制定政策来解决学生的在线社交网络行为问题。随着社交媒体使用的增加,医学院校的政策落后于适当的行为规范。一些医学院校的既定政策可以为其他学校提供参考和借鉴。