Faculty of Dentistry, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Department of Oral Medicine and Pathology, Faculty of Dentistry, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Eur J Dent Educ. 2021 Feb;25(1):151-158. doi: 10.1111/eje.12585. Epub 2020 Sep 8.
The social media attitude of health science students might affect patients' opinion about the health profession and have negative impact on e-professionalism. The aim of this study is to investigate the behaviour of Greek dental students on Facebook, focusing on potentially unprofessional posts and the online student-patient relationship.
Five hundred and twelve dental students in Greece answered an anonymous, 23-item questionnaire including multiple-choice questions about various topics, including Facebook profile settings and content shared by dental students, student-patient relationship via Facebook; and students' perception about the impact of their online behaviour.
93.2% of responders had a Facebook profile and 80.5% admitted that their online attitude might affect patients' opinion about dental profession. However, 71.7% posted pictures from holidays, 41.5% from nightclubs, and 26.2% photographs wearing swimwear/underwear, while 12.8% expressed online political party predilection. One quarter of students in clinical years were Facebook friends with patients and 58% and 30% of them had online discussion about topics related or not to dentistry, respectively, while 6.8% of dental students had posted defamatory comments about the dental school, faculty members or academic staff on Facebook.
In accordance with studies in other countries, most Greek dental students had a Facebook profile and, although the majority realised the impact of Facebook behaviour on e-professionalism, a considerable percentage posted unprofessional content.
Dental students might fall into pitfalls when it comes to e-professionalism. As social media are becoming an integral part of life, there is need to include e-professionalism in dental education curriculum.
健康科学专业学生的社交媒体态度可能会影响患者对健康行业的看法,并对电子职业道德产生负面影响。本研究旨在调查希腊牙科学生在 Facebook 上的行为,重点关注潜在的不专业帖子和在线学生-患者关系。
希腊的 512 名牙科学生回答了一份匿名的 23 项问卷,其中包括关于各种主题的多项选择题,包括牙科学生的 Facebook 个人资料设置和共享的内容、通过 Facebook 建立的学生-患者关系;以及学生对其在线行为影响的看法。
93.2%的受访者有 Facebook 个人资料,80.5%的人承认他们的在线态度可能会影响患者对牙科专业的看法。然而,71.7%的人发布了度假照片,41.5%的人发布了夜总会照片,26.2%的人发布了穿着泳衣/内衣的照片,而 12.8%的人在网上表达了对政党的偏好。有四分之一的临床年级学生是患者的 Facebook 好友,分别有 58%和 30%的人在网上讨论与牙科相关或不相关的话题,而 6.8%的牙科学生在 Facebook 上发布了诋毁牙科学校、教师或学术人员的评论。
与其他国家的研究一致,大多数希腊牙科学生都有 Facebook 个人资料,尽管大多数人意识到 Facebook 行为对电子职业道德的影响,但仍有相当一部分人发布了不专业的内容。
在电子职业道德方面,牙科学生可能会陷入困境。随着社交媒体成为生活的一部分,需要将电子职业道德纳入牙科教育课程。