Department of Neurosurgery, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, Gates Vascular Institute at Kaleida Health, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2021 Oct;154:e605-e615. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.07.098. Epub 2021 Jul 27.
Social media have revolutionized access to educational content. Given the extensive presence of social media, these platforms have the potential to influence neurosurgical training and education of residents and fellows. We explored the attitudes of neurosurgical trainees (postgraduate years 1-9) toward social media and their perceived influence on training and education.
This study was a survey of trainees at North American neurosurgery residency programs. A 22-item survey, including 2 free-text questions, was distributed through the Congress of Neurological Surgeons listserv. The survey consisted of questions regarding demographics, social media platform use, and trainee views on social media; their perceived impact on education and job performance was gauged using a 5-point Likert scale. Descriptive analysis was performed.
The survey was disseminated to 1160 neurosurgery trainees, with a response rate of 15.3%. Of 178 respondents, 132 (74.2%) were men; 142 (79.8%) were 25-34 years old. All respondents used social media. The most commonly used platforms were Facebook (87.1%), followed by YouTube (84.3%), Instagram (81.5%), and Twitter (74.7%). The most common reasons for social media use were personal social (89.8%), networking (65.5%), and academic resources (65.0%); 113 respondents (63.5%) reported spending <25% of their time on social media for academics. The Neurosurgical Atlas (63.3%), Congress of Neurological Surgeons (11.2%), and American Association of Neurological Surgeons (10.1%) social media accounts were the most commonly used academic platforms.
Social media use was ubiquitous among trainees. Although most used social media for personal social communication, most also used it for academic purposes.
社交媒体彻底改变了获取教育内容的方式。鉴于社交媒体的广泛存在,这些平台有可能影响神经外科住院医师和研究员的培训和教育。我们探讨了神经外科住院医师(1 至 9 年级)对社交媒体的态度,以及他们对培训和教育的看法。
本研究是对北美神经外科住院医师培训计划中的住院医师进行的一项调查。通过神经外科学会名单服务发布了一份包含 22 个项目的调查问卷,其中包括 2 个自由文本问题。调查问卷包括有关人口统计学、社交媒体平台使用情况以及住院医师对社交媒体的看法等问题;使用 5 分李克特量表来衡量他们对教育和工作表现的感知影响。进行了描述性分析。
该调查已分发给 1160 名神经外科住院医师,回复率为 15.3%。在 178 名受访者中,有 132 名(74.2%)为男性;142 名(79.8%)年龄在 25-34 岁之间。所有受访者都使用社交媒体。最常用的平台是 Facebook(87.1%),其次是 YouTube(84.3%)、Instagram(81.5%)和 Twitter(74.7%)。使用社交媒体的最常见原因是个人社交(89.8%)、网络(65.5%)和学术资源(65.0%);113 名受访者(63.5%)报告称,他们在社交媒体上花费<25%的时间用于学术。神经外科图谱(63.3%)、神经外科学会(11.2%)和美国神经外科学会(10.1%)的社交媒体账户是最常用的学术平台。
社交媒体在住院医师中广泛使用。尽管大多数人使用社交媒体进行个人社交交流,但大多数人也将其用于学术目的。