De Gagne Jennie C, Cho Eunji, Yamane Sandra S, Jin Haesu, Nam Jeehae D, Jung Dukyoo
School of Nursing, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States.
School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States.
JMIR Med Educ. 2021 May 13;7(2):e28805. doi: 10.2196/28805.
Health professions students use social media to communicate with other students and health professionals, discuss career plans or coursework, and share the results of research projects or new information. These platforms allow students to share thoughts and perceptions that are not disclosed in formal education settings. Twitter provides an excellent window through which health professions educators can observe students' sociocultural and learning needs. However, despite its merits, cyberincivility on Twitter among health professions students has been reported. Cyber means using electronic technologies, and incivility is a general term for bad manners. As such, cyberincivility refers to any act of disrespectful, insensitive, or disruptive behavior in an electronic environment.
This study aims to describe the characteristics and instances of cyberincivility posted on Twitter by self-identified health professions students. A further objective of the study is to analyze the prevalence of tweets perceived as inappropriate or potentially objectionable while describing patterns and differences in the instances of cyberincivility posted by those users.
We used a cross-sectional descriptive Twitter data mining method to collect quantitative and qualitative data from August 2019 to February 2020. The sample was taken from users who self-identified as health professions students (eg, medicine, nursing, dental, pharmacy, physician assistant, and physical therapy) in their user description. Data management and analysis were performed with a combination of SAS 9.4 for descriptive and inferential statistics, including logistic regression, and NVivo 12 for descriptive patterns of textual data.
We analyzed 20 of the most recent tweets for each account (N=12,820). A total of 639 user accounts were analyzed for quantitative analysis, including 280 (43.8%) medicine students and 329 (51.5%) nursing students in 22 countries: the United States (287/639, 44.9%), the United Kingdom (197/639, 30.8%), unknown countries (104/639, 16.3%), and 19 other countries (51/639, 8.0%). Of the 639 accounts, 193 (30.2%) were coded as having instances of cyberincivility. Of these, 61.7% (119/193), 32.6% (63/193), and 5.7% (11/193) belonged to students in nursing, medicine, and other disciplines, respectively. Among 502 instances of cyberincivility identified from 641 qualitative analysis samples, the largest categories were profanity and product promotion. Several aggressive or biased comments toward other users, politicians, or certain groups of people were also found.
Cyberincivility is a multifaceted phenomenon that must be considered in its complexity if health professions students are to embrace a culture of mutual respect and collaboration. Students' perceptions and reports of their Twitter experiences offer insights into behavior on the web and the evolving role of cyberspace, and potentially problematic posts provide opportunities for teaching digital professionalism. Our study indicates that there is a continued need to provide students with guidance and training regarding the importance of maintaining a professional persona on the web.
卫生专业学生利用社交媒体与其他学生和卫生专业人员交流,讨论职业规划或课程作业,并分享研究项目成果或新信息。这些平台使学生能够分享在正规教育环境中不会透露的想法和看法。推特为卫生专业教育工作者提供了一个绝佳的窗口,通过它可以观察学生的社会文化和学习需求。然而,尽管推特具有诸多优点,但卫生专业学生在推特上的网络不文明行为也时有报道。“网络”指使用电子技术,“不文明”是不良行为的统称。因此,网络不文明行为是指在电子环境中任何不尊重、不敏感或具有干扰性的行为。
本研究旨在描述自称卫生专业学生在推特上发布的网络不文明行为的特征和实例。该研究的另一个目的是分析被认为不适当或可能令人反感的推文的流行情况,同时描述这些用户发布的网络不文明行为实例的模式和差异。
我们采用横断面描述性推特数据挖掘方法,从2019年8月至2020年2月收集定量和定性数据。样本取自用户描述中自称卫生专业学生(如医学、护理、牙科、药学、医师助理和物理治疗)的用户。数据管理和分析结合使用SAS 9.4进行描述性和推断性统计,包括逻辑回归,以及NVivo 12进行文本数据的描述性模式分析。
我们分析了每个账户(N = 12,820)最近的20条推文。总共对639个用户账户进行了定量分析,其中包括来自22个国家的280名(43.8%)医学专业学生和329名(51.5%)护理专业学生:美国(287/639,44.9%)、英国(197/639,30.8%)、未知国家(104/639,16.3%)以及其他19个国家(51/639,8.0%)。在639个账户中,193个(30.2%)被编码为存在网络不文明行为实例。其中,分别有61.7%(119/193)、32.6%(63/193)和5.7%(11/193)属于护理、医学和其他学科的学生。在从641个定性分析样本中识别出的502起网络不文明行为实例中,最大的类别是亵渎和产品推广。还发现了一些对其他用户、政治家或特定人群的攻击性或偏见性评论。
如果卫生专业学生要接受相互尊重与合作的文化,网络不文明行为是一个必须从其复杂性方面加以考虑的多层面现象。学生对其推特体验的看法和报告为网络行为及网络空间不断演变的作用提供了见解,而潜在的问题帖子为教授数字职业素养提供了机会。我们的研究表明,持续需要向学生提供关于在网络上保持专业形象的重要性的指导和培训。