School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, T201-2211 Westbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 2B5, Canada.
Int J Med Inform. 2018 Jul;115:92-105. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2018.04.010. Epub 2018 Apr 26.
Social media allows for instant access to, and dissemination of, information around the globe. Access to social media in low- and middle-income countries has increased exponentially in recent years due to technological advances. Despite this growth, the use of social media in low- and middle-income countries is less well-researched than in high-income countries.
To identify, explore and summarize the current state of the literature on the use of social media for health in low- and middle-income countries.
A scoping review was conducted on literature available to December 2017. Six databases were searched, and grey literature was identified through the Google and Google Scholar search engines. Literature was considered for inclusion if it (1) was published in English, (2) was conducted in or in relation to a low or middle-income country, (3) reported on as least one type of social media or social media use generally for health purposes, and (4) reported on at least one aspect of human health. Content analysis was performed to identify themes.
Forty articles met the inclusion criteria. Thirty-one were research articles, and nine were review/discussion/descriptive and evaluative reports. Since 2010, when the first article was published, most of the literature has focused on Asian (n = 15) and African (n = 12) countries. Twitter (n = 11) and Facebook (n = 10) were the most frequently discussed individual social media platforms. Four themes were identified: (1) use for health education and influence (sub-themes were health behaviour and health education); (2) use within infectious disease and outbreak situations; (3) use within natural disaster, terrorism, crisis and emergency response situations; and (4) producers and consumers of social media for health (sub-themes were misinformation, organizational challenges, users' expectations, and challenges of unique sub-populations). Most studies addressed more than one theme.
Social media has the ability to facilitate disease surveillance, mass communication, health education, knowledge translation, and collaboration amongst health providers in low- and middle-income countries. Misinformation or poorly communicated information can contribute to negative health behaviours and adverse health outcomes amongst consumers, as well as hysteria and chaos. Organizations using social media should provide accurate and readable information. Promotion of credible social media sites by governments, health care professionals and researchers, as well as education on the appropriate use of social media, could help to lessen the effect of misinformation. This is a nascent body of literature and future research should investigate the relative effectiveness of various platforms for different users, other potential uses, and pursue a broader geographical focus.
社交媒体使人们能够即时获取和传播来自全球的信息。近年来,随着技术的进步,中低收入国家(LMICs)的社交媒体使用量呈指数级增长。尽管增长如此之快,但社交媒体在 LMICs 的使用情况的研究不如高收入国家(HICs)充分。
确定、探索和总结社交媒体在中低收入国家(LMICs)的健康应用方面的现有文献。
对截至 2017 年 12 月的文献进行了范围综述。检索了六个数据库,并通过 Google 和 Google Scholar 搜索引擎确定了灰色文献。如果文献(1)以英文发表,(2)在中低收入国家进行或与中低收入国家有关,(3)报告了至少一种社交媒体或社交媒体一般用于健康目的,以及(4)报告了人类健康的至少一个方面,则考虑将其纳入。采用内容分析法确定主题。
有 40 篇文章符合纳入标准。其中 31 篇为研究文章,9 篇为综述/讨论/描述和评估报告。自 2010 年第一份文章发表以来,大多数文献主要集中在亚洲(n=15)和非洲(n=12)国家。Twitter(n=11)和 Facebook(n=10)是讨论最多的个人社交媒体平台。确定了四个主题:(1)用于健康教育和影响(子主题为健康行为和健康教育);(2)在传染病和疫情情况下的使用;(3)在自然灾害、恐怖主义、危机和应急响应情况下的使用;(4)社交媒体的生产者和消费者(子主题为错误信息、组织挑战、用户期望和独特亚群体的挑战)。大多数研究都涉及不止一个主题。
社交媒体有能力促进疾病监测、大众传播、健康教育、知识转化以及中低收入国家卫生服务提供者之间的合作。错误信息或沟通不当的信息会导致消费者产生负面健康行为和不良健康结果,以及引起恐慌和混乱。使用社交媒体的组织应提供准确和可读的信息。政府、医疗保健专业人员和研究人员宣传可信赖的社交媒体网站,并对社交媒体的正确使用进行教育,这可能有助于减轻错误信息的影响。这是一个新兴的文献领域,未来的研究应该调查不同用户对各种平台的相对有效性、其他潜在用途,并追求更广泛的地理重点。