Division of Hospital Medicine, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California, USA.
University of California, San Francisco, Department of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.
J Hosp Med. 2018 Nov;13(11):764-769. doi: 10.12788/jhm.2987.
Twitter-based journal clubs are intended to connect clinicians, educators, and researchers to discuss recent research and aid in dissemination of results. The Journal of Hospital Medicine (JHM) began producing a Twitter-based journal club, #JHMChat, in 2015.
To describe the implementation and assess the impact of a journal-sponsored, Twitter-based journal club on Twitter and journal metrics.
Each #JHMChat focused on a recently published JHM article, was moderated by a social media editor, and included one study author or guest.
The total number of participants, tweets, tweets/participant, impressions, page views, and change in the Altmetric score were assessed after each session. Thematic analysis of each article was conducted, and post-chat surveys of participating authors and participant responses to continuing medical education surveys were reviewed.
Seventeen Twitter-based chats were held: seven (47%) focused on value, six (40%) targeted clinical issues, and four (27%) focused on education. On average, we found 2.17 (±0.583 SD) million impressions/session, 499 (± 129 SD) total tweets/session, and 73 (±24 SD) participants/session. Value-based care articles had the greatest number of impressions (2.61 ± 0.55 million) and participants (90 ± 12). The mean increase in the Altmetric score was 14 points (±12), with medical education-themed articles garnering the greatest change (mean increase of 32). Page views were noted to have increased similarly to levels of electronic Table of Content releases. Authors and participants believed #JHMChat was a valuable experience and rated it highly on post-chat evaluations.
Online journal clubs appear to increase awareness and uptake of journal article results and are considered a useful tool by participants.
基于 Twitter 的期刊俱乐部旨在将临床医生、教育工作者和研究人员联系起来,讨论最新的研究成果,并帮助传播研究结果。《医院医学杂志》(JHM)于 2015 年开始制作基于 Twitter 的期刊俱乐部#JHMChat。
描述期刊赞助的基于 Twitter 的期刊俱乐部在 Twitter 和期刊指标上的实施情况并评估其影响。
每次#JHMChat 都聚焦于最近发表的 JHM 文章,由社交媒体编辑主持,并邀请一位研究作者或嘉宾参与。
每次会议后评估参与人数、推文数量、每条推文的参与者数量、印象数量、页面浏览量以及 Altmetric 评分的变化。对每篇文章进行主题分析,并对参与作者的会后调查和参与者对继续医学教育调查的回复进行审查。
共举办了 17 次基于 Twitter 的聊天活动:7 次(47%)关注价值,6 次(40%)针对临床问题,4 次(27%)关注教育。平均而言,我们发现每次会议有 2.17(±0.583 SD)百万次印象/会议、499(±129 SD)条推文/会议和 73(±24 SD)名参与者/会议。以价值为基础的护理文章获得的印象(2.61 ± 0.55 百万)和参与者(90 ± 12)最多。Altmetric 评分的平均增幅为 14 分(±12),以医学教育为主题的文章增幅最大(平均增加 32 分)。页面浏览量的增加与电子目录发布的水平相似。作者和参与者认为#JHMChat 是一次有价值的体验,并在会后评估中给予高度评价。
在线期刊俱乐部似乎提高了人们对期刊文章结果的认识和接受度,并且受到参与者的高度评价。