Lander Sarah T, Sanders James O, Cook Peter C, O'Malley Natasha T
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2017 Oct/Nov;37(7):e436-e439. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000001032.
Internet searches and social media utilization in health care has exploded over the past 5 years, and patients utilize it to gain information on their health conditions and physicians. Social media has the potential to serve as a means for education, communication, and marketing in all health care specialties. Physicians are sometimes reluctant to engage because of concerns of privacy, litigation, and lack of experience with this modality. Many surgical subspecialties have capitalized on social media but no study to date has examined the specific footprint of pediatric orthopaedic surgeons in this realm. We aim to quantify the utilization of individual social media platforms by pediatric orthopaedic surgeons, and identify any differences between private and hospital-based physicians, but also regional differences.
Using the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America Member Directory, each active member's social media presence was reviewed through an Internet search. Members were stratified on the basis of practice model and geographic location. Individual Internet searches, social media sites, and number of publications were reviewed for social media presence.
Of 987 Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America members, 95% had a professional webpage, 14.8% a professional Facebook page, 2.2% a professional Twitter page, 36.8% a LinkedIn profile, 25.8% a ResearchGate profile, 33% at least 1 YouTube. Hospital-based physicians had a lower mean level of utilization of social media compared with their private practice peers, and a higher incidence of Pubmed publications. Private practice physicians had double the social media utilization. Regional differences reveal that practicing Pediatric Orthopaedists in the Northeast had increased utilization of ResearchGate and LinkedIn and the West had the lowest mean social media utilization levels.
The rapid expansion of social media usage by patients and their family members is an undeniable force affecting the health care industry. The Internet and social media platforms provide all physicians with a means to educate patients, collaborate with colleagues, and promote their practice and areas of interest. Our survey indicates that pediatric orthopaedic surgeons may be underutilizing their potential social media presence.
Level IV.
在过去5年中,互联网搜索和社交媒体在医疗保健领域的应用呈爆炸式增长,患者利用它们获取有关自身健康状况和医生的信息。社交媒体有潜力成为所有医疗专业领域教育、沟通和营销的手段。由于担心隐私、诉讼以及缺乏这种模式的经验,医生有时不愿参与。许多外科亚专业已经利用了社交媒体,但迄今为止尚无研究考察小儿骨科医生在这一领域的具体情况。我们旨在量化小儿骨科医生对各个社交媒体平台的使用情况,确定私立和医院执业医生之间以及地区之间的差异。
利用北美小儿骨科学会会员名录,通过互联网搜索审查每位活跃会员的社交媒体情况。会员根据执业模式和地理位置进行分层。审查个人互联网搜索、社交媒体网站以及社交媒体情况的出版物数量。
在987名北美小儿骨科学会会员中,95%有专业网页,14.8%有专业Facebook页面,2.2%有专业Twitter页面,36.8%有领英档案,25.8%有ResearchGate档案,33%至少有1个YouTube。与私立同行相比,医院执业医生的社交媒体平均使用水平较低,PubMed出版物的发生率较高。私立执业医生的社交媒体使用率是其两倍。地区差异表明,东北部的小儿骨科医生对ResearchGate和领英的使用率增加,而西部的社交媒体平均使用水平最低。
患者及其家庭成员对社交媒体使用的迅速扩展是影响医疗行业的一股不可忽视的力量。互联网和社交媒体平台为所有医生提供了一种教育患者、与同事合作以及推广其业务和感兴趣领域的手段。我们的调查表明,小儿骨科医生可能未充分利用其潜在的社交媒体影响力。
四级。