Pellino Gianluca, Simillis Constantinos, Qiu Shengyang, Rasheed Shahnawaz, Mills Sarah, Warren Oliver, Kontovounisios Christos, Tekkis Paris P
Department of Colorectal Surgery, Royal Marsden Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Colorectal Surgery, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2017 Aug 23;12(8):e0183031. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0183031. eCollection 2017.
Social media (SM) can provide information and medical knowledge to patients. Our aim was to review the literature and web-based content on SM that is used by Colorectal Cancer (CRC) patients, as well as surgeons' interaction with SM.
Studies published between 2006 and 2016 were assessed. We also assessed the impact of several hashtags on Twitter with a freeware (Symplur).
Nine studies were included assessing Twitter (78%), Forums/Cancer-survivor networks (33%), and Facebook (22%). Aims included use of SM by CRC patients (67%), cancer-specific usage of SM with different types of cancer (44%), content credibility (33%), and influence in CRC awareness (33%). Prevention was the most common information that CRC patients looked for, followed by treatment side-effects. Only 2% of CRC SM users are doctors. SM use by colorectal consultants was suboptimal. Only 38% of surgeons had a LinkedIn account (most with less than 50 connections), and 3% used Twitter. A steep increase of tweets was observed for searched Hashtags over time, which was more marked for #ColonCancer (+67%vs+38%, #Coloncancer vs #RectalCancer). Participants engaged with colon cancer increased by 85%, whereas rectal cancer ones increased by 29%. The hashtag '#RectalCancer' was mostly tweeted by colorectal surgeons. The official twitter account of American Society of Colorectal Surgeons (@fascrs_updates) was the most active account.
CRC patients and relatives are increasingly engaging with SM. CRC surgeons' participation is poor, but we confirm a trend toward a greater involvement. Most SM lack of authoritative validation and the quality of shared content still is largely anecdotic and not scientifically evidenced-based. However, SM may offer several advantages over conventional information sharing sources for CRC patients and surgeons, and create connections with mutual enrichment.
社交媒体(SM)可为患者提供信息和医学知识。我们的目的是回顾有关结直肠癌(CRC)患者使用的SM的文献和网络内容,以及外科医生与SM的互动情况。
评估2006年至2016年间发表的研究。我们还使用一款免费软件(Symplur)评估了几个主题标签在推特上的影响。
纳入了9项研究,评估了推特(78%)、论坛/癌症幸存者网络(33%)和脸书(22%)。目的包括CRC患者对SM的使用(67%)、不同类型癌症的SM特定使用情况(44%)、内容可信度(33%)以及对CRC认知的影响(33%)。预防是CRC患者最常寻找的信息,其次是治疗副作用。CRC SM用户中只有2%是医生。结直肠专科医生对SM的使用并不理想。只有38%的外科医生有领英账户(大多数人脉少于50人),3%使用推特。随着时间的推移,搜索到的主题标签的推文数量急剧增加,#结肠癌(#ColonCancer)的增加更为明显(+67%对+38%,#Coloncancer对#RectalCancer)。参与结肠癌相关话题的人数增加了85%,而直肠癌相关话题的人数增加了29%。主题标签“#直肠癌”(#RectalCancer)大多由结直肠外科医生发布。美国结直肠外科医师协会的官方推特账户(@fascrs_updates)是最活跃的账户。
CRC患者及其亲属越来越多地参与到SM中。CRC外科医生的参与度较低,但我们确认有更多参与的趋势。大多数SM缺乏权威验证,共享内容的质量在很大程度上仍然是轶事性的,缺乏科学依据。然而,对于CRC患者和外科医生来说,SM可能比传统信息共享来源有几个优势,并能建立相互丰富的联系。