College of Pharmacy, QU Health, Qatar University , Doha, Qatar.
School of Medicine, University of St Andrews , St Andrews, UK.
J Interprof Care. 2020 Sep-Oct;34(5):622-632. doi: 10.1080/13561820.2020.1819779. Epub 2020 Sep 22.
Social media posts can be used to explore public perceptions of interprofessional teams and healthcare professionals. The aim of this study was to use social listening technique to explore unfiltered public perceptions of the professionals involved in healthcare teams during the COVID-19 pandemic, in a naturalistic online setting, and to elaborate on the emotional reactions in response to an online social media post. A cross-sectional retrospective review of comments on a specific social media post was conducted between 15 March and 28 April 2020 using summative content analysis. One image that was widely circulated on social media platforms with two questions: 'Who society thinks works at hospital? versus who really works at hospitals?' was selected. Three platforms were searched, Facebook®, Twitter®, and LinkedIn®. Only publicly available posts were included. Out of the initial 40 posts identified, 21 posts which had 1759 comments were analysed and 1576 were included for coding. Of the emerging nine themes, perceptions of who is in the team was the largest (40.5%, n = 639), followed by agreement (23.1%, n = 364) and feeling excluded (16.2%, n = 255). Of emotional expressions, 42.1% were positive and 57.9% negative. The most frequent emotions were frustration (54.4%, n = 857) followed by gratitude (16.3%, n = 257) and relief (15.9%, n = 250). The post brought considerable attention to the role of the interprofessional team and generated many feelings of frustration and exclusion. For this reason, the response to this social media post is very important and not to be overlooked. Healthcare professionals need to work together to strengthen their presence as an interprofessional team, united to deliver safe effective quality care for patients. The current COVID-19 pandemic and the media attention should be taken as an opportunity by the interprofessional community to work together to combat negative media stereotypes. Further research is warranted on public perceptions of the healthcare team.
社交媒体帖子可用于探索公众对多专业团队和医疗保健专业人员的看法。本研究旨在使用社会聆听技术,在自然的在线环境中探索公众对参与 COVID-19 大流行的医疗保健团队的专业人员的未经过滤的看法,并详细阐述对在线社交媒体帖子的情绪反应。使用总结性内容分析,于 2020 年 3 月 15 日至 4 月 28 日期间,对特定社交媒体帖子的评论进行了横断面回顾性审查。选择了在社交媒体平台上广泛传播的一张图片,图片上有两个问题:“社会认为在医院工作的人是谁?与真正在医院工作的人是谁?”。搜索了三个平台:Facebook®、Twitter®和 LinkedIn®。仅包括公开可用的帖子。在最初确定的 40 个帖子中,分析了 21 个有 1759 条评论的帖子,并对 1576 条评论进行了编码。在出现的 9 个主题中,对团队中人员的看法最大(40.5%,n=639),其次是同意(23.1%,n=364)和被排斥感(16.2%,n=255)。在情感表达方面,42.1%为积极,57.9%为消极。最常见的情绪是沮丧(54.4%,n=857),其次是感激(16.3%,n=257)和宽慰(15.9%,n=250)。该帖子引起了对多专业团队角色的极大关注,并引起了许多沮丧和排斥感。因此,对这个社交媒体帖子的反应非常重要,不容忽视。医疗保健专业人员需要共同努力,加强他们作为一个多专业团队的存在,团结起来为患者提供安全有效的高质量护理。当前的 COVID-19 大流行和媒体关注度应被多专业团体视为一个机会,共同努力打击负面媒体刻板印象。需要进一步研究公众对医疗保健团队的看法。