Economides James M, Choi Youna K, Fan Kenneth L, Kanuri Arjun P, Song David H
Department of Plastic Surgery, MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D.C.
Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2019 Aug 19;7(8):e2288. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000002288. eCollection 2019 Aug.
As social media's applications continue to evolve, the pitfalls and dangers associated with misuse have been accentuated in the literature. Consequently, academic institutions across the nation have implemented social media policies. This study is aimed to evaluate the state of social media literature examining postgraduate trainees (residents/fellows).
A systematic search was performed identifying peer-reviewed publications presenting original research. Studies published through December 8, 2018, focusing on social media use among postgraduate trainees were considered for inclusion.
Fifty-three studies were categorized into 4 domains: (1) resident recruitment, (2) graduate medical education, (3) professional development, and (4) academic scholarship. Thirty-four (64.15%) investigated social media's impact on professional development, of which 16 (47.05%) highlighted the detrimental potential on trainee professionalism. The remaining 18 (52.94%) focused on promoting social media training during residency, and/or enhancing social media competency to benefit professional development. Fourteen (26.42%) rationalized social media use in augmenting graduate medical education. Ten (18.87%) assessed social media's influence on resident recruitment, of which 7 (70%) depicted use as a screening instrument for program directors on resident applicants. Two (3.77%) of the studies introduced social media as a platform for academic scholarship with indicators as altmetrics.
The well-established disadvantages of social media use by the postgraduate trainee continue to persist in the literature. However, there is recognition of social media as a valuable resource in influencing resident recruitment, graduate medical education, professional development, and academic scholarship, representing a paradigm shift-from cautiously avoidant to thoughtful capitalization on its immense potential.
随着社交媒体应用的不断发展,文献中已强调了与滥用相关的陷阱和危险。因此,全国的学术机构都实施了社交媒体政策。本研究旨在评估考察研究生学员(住院医师/研究员)的社交媒体文献状况。
进行了系统检索,以识别发表原创研究的同行评审出版物。纳入了截至2018年12月8日发表的、关注研究生学员社交媒体使用情况的研究。
53项研究分为4个领域:(1)住院医师招聘,(2)毕业后医学教育,(3)职业发展,以及(4)学术奖学金。34项(64.15%)研究调查了社交媒体对职业发展的影响,其中16项(47.05%)强调了其对学员职业素养的潜在危害。其余18项(52.94%)专注于在住院医师培训期间推广社交媒体培训,和/或提高社交媒体能力以促进职业发展。14项(26.42%)研究论证了社交媒体在加强毕业后医学教育方面的作用。10项(18.87%)研究评估了社交媒体对住院医师招聘的影响,其中7项(70%)将其描述为项目主任筛选住院医师申请人的工具。2项(3.77%)研究将社交媒体作为学术奖学金的平台,并以替代计量学指标作为衡量标准。
文献中持续存在研究生学员使用社交媒体的公认弊端。然而,社交媒体被视为影响住院医师招聘、毕业后医学教育、职业发展和学术奖学金的宝贵资源,这代表了一种范式转变——从谨慎回避到明智地利用其巨大潜力。