Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Acute and Chronic Care, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD.
Transplantation. 2019 Mar;103(3):573-580. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002243.
Social media platforms are increasingly used in surgery and have shown promise as effective tools to promote deceased donation and expand living donor transplantation. There is a growing need to understand how social media-driven communication is perceived by providers in the field of transplantation.
We surveyed 299 members of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons about their use of, attitudes toward, and perceptions of social media and analyzed relationships between responses and participant characteristics.
Respondents used social media to communicate with: family and friends (76%), surgeons (59%), transplant professionals (57%), transplant recipients (21%), living donors (16%), and waitlisted candidates (15%). Most respondents (83%) reported using social media for at least 1 purpose. Although most (61%) supported sharing information with transplant recipients via social media, 42% believed it should not be used to facilitate living donor-recipient matching. Younger age (P = 0.02) and fewer years of experience in the field of transplantation (P = 0.03) were associated with stronger belief that social media can be influential in living organ donation. Respondents at transplant centers with higher reported use of social media had more favorable views about sharing information with transplant recipients (P < 0.01), increasing awareness about deceased organ donation (P < 0.01), and advertising for transplant centers (P < 0.01). Individual characteristics influence opinions about the role and clinical usefulness of social media.
Transplant center involvement and support for social media may influence clinician perceptions and practices. Increasing use of social media among transplant professionals may provide an opportunity to deliver high-quality information to patients.
社交媒体平台在外科领域的应用日益广泛,并且已被证明是促进器官捐献和扩大活体供者移植的有效工具。越来越需要了解社交媒体驱动的交流在移植领域的提供者中是如何被感知的。
我们调查了 299 名美国移植外科医生协会成员,了解他们对社交媒体的使用、态度和看法,并分析了回答与参与者特征之间的关系。
受访者使用社交媒体与以下人群进行沟通:家人和朋友(76%)、外科医生(59%)、移植专业人员(57%)、移植受者(21%)、活体供者(16%)和候补候选人(15%)。大多数受访者(83%)报告至少出于 1 个目的使用社交媒体。尽管大多数(61%)受访者支持通过社交媒体向移植受者分享信息,但有 42%的受访者认为不应使用社交媒体来促进活体供者-受者匹配。较年轻的年龄(P = 0.02)和在移植领域的经验较少(P = 0.03)与更强的信念相关,即社交媒体可以在活体器官捐献中产生影响。在报告社交媒体使用频率较高的移植中心工作的受访者对与移植受者分享信息(P < 0.01)、提高对已故器官捐献的认识(P < 0.01)和为移植中心做广告(P < 0.01)的看法更为有利。个人特征影响对社交媒体的作用和临床用途的看法。
移植中心的参与和对社交媒体的支持可能会影响临床医生的看法和实践。移植专业人员越来越多地使用社交媒体可能为向患者提供高质量信息提供机会。