Kilic Yakup, Chauhan Devkishan, Avery Pearl, Horwood Nigel, Nakov Radislav, Disney Ben, Segal Jonathan P
Hillingdon Hospital, Uxbridge, UK.
Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Dorchester, UK.
Clin Med (Lond). 2021 Sep;21(5):e475-e479. doi: 10.7861/clinmed.2021-0357.
Medical professionals use social media to interact with other healthcare professionals, discuss medical issues and promote healthcare information. These platforms have tremendous power to promote healthcare messages but also have potential to damage the profession if used inappropriately. It is currently unknown how others perceive medical doctors' Twitter activity and, therefore, we conducted an online survey exploring these views.
We used a Google Forms questionnaire consisting of 21 questions, which we distributed on Twitter, exploring doctors', patients', the public's and other healthcare professionals' views of doctors' Twitter activities. We investigated factors that were associated with mistrust by univariate and multivariate analysis.
Seven-hundred and twenty-six respondents completed the survey. By univariate analysis, a higher proportion of non-doctors reported witnessing unprofessional behaviour and potential breaches of patient confidentiality compared with doctors (p<0.01). In addition, a significantly higher proportion of non-doctors felt that doctors' Twitter accounts should be monitored by both their employer and regulator when compared with doctors. By multivariate analysis, the main predictor of mistrust in the profession were those that had previously witnessed unprofessional behaviour (odds ratio 2.70; 95% confidence interval 2.08-3.33; p<0.01).
There are discrepancies in how doctors and non-doctors view Twitter activity and significant mistrust in the profession was brought about by doctors' Twitter activity. To help limit this, adherence to current guidelines set out by the General Medical Council and British Medical Association is vital and doctors should be cautious about how their Twitter activity is professionally perceived by others before posting.
医学专业人员利用社交媒体与其他医疗保健专业人员互动,讨论医学问题并推广医疗保健信息。这些平台有巨大的力量来传播医疗保健信息,但如果使用不当也有可能损害该职业形象。目前尚不清楚其他人如何看待医生在推特上的活动,因此,我们开展了一项在线调查来探究这些观点。
我们使用了一份包含21个问题的谷歌表单问卷,在推特上进行分发,以探究医生、患者、公众和其他医疗保健专业人员对医生推特活动的看法。我们通过单因素和多因素分析调查了与不信任相关的因素。
726名受访者完成了调查。通过单因素分析,与医生相比,有更高比例的非医生报告称目睹过不专业行为以及可能违反患者保密规定的情况(p<0.01)。此外,与医生相比,有显著更高比例的非医生认为医生的推特账户应由其雇主和监管机构进行监管。通过多因素分析,对该职业不信任的主要预测因素是那些曾目睹过不专业行为的人(比值比2.70;95%置信区间2.08 - 3.33;p<0.0l)。
医生和非医生对推特活动的看法存在差异,医生的推特活动导致了对该职业的严重不信任。为了帮助限制这种情况,遵守英国医学总会和英国医学协会制定的现行指南至关重要,医生在发布推文之前应谨慎考虑他人对其推特活动的专业看法。