Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2013 Jan 1;20(1):16-24. doi: 10.1136/amiajnl-2012-000949. Epub 2012 Jul 6.
The literature describes teenagers as active users of social media, who seem to care about privacy, but who also reveal a considerable amount of personal information. There have been no studies of how they manage personal health information on social media.
To understand how chronically ill teenage patients manage their privacy on social media sites.
A qualitative study based on a content analysis of semistructured interviews with 20 hospital patients (12-18 years).
Most teenage patients do not disclose their personal health information on social media, even though the study found a pervasive use of Facebook. Facebook is a place to be a "regular", rather than a sick teenager. It is a place where teenage patients stay up-to-date about their social life-it is not seen as a place to discuss their diagnosis and treatment. The majority of teenage patients don't use social media to come into contact with others with similar conditions and they don't use the internet to find health information about their diagnosis.
Social media play an important role in the social life of teenage patients. They enable young patients to be "regular" teenagers. Teenage patients' online privacy behavior is an expression of their need for self-definition and self-protection.
文献描述青少年是社交媒体的活跃用户,他们似乎关心隐私,但也透露了相当多的个人信息。目前还没有研究青少年如何在社交媒体上管理个人健康信息。
了解慢性病青少年患者如何在社交媒体网站上管理他们的隐私。
一项基于对 20 名住院患者(12-18 岁)进行半结构化访谈的内容分析的定性研究。
大多数青少年患者不会在社交媒体上披露他们的个人健康信息,尽管研究发现 Facebook 的使用非常普遍。Facebook 是一个成为“正常”青少年的地方,而不是一个生病的青少年。这是一个让青少年患者了解他们社交生活的地方——它不被视为讨论诊断和治疗的地方。大多数青少年患者不会使用社交媒体与其他有类似病情的人接触,也不会使用互联网查找关于他们诊断的健康信息。
社交媒体在青少年患者的社交生活中发挥着重要作用。它们使年轻患者能够成为“正常”的青少年。青少年患者的在线隐私行为是他们自我定义和自我保护需求的表现。