Department of General Surgery, Royal Alexandra Hospital, Paisley, PA2 9PN, UK.
Department of Colorectal Surgery, Royal Devon and Exeter Foundation Trust, Exeter, Devon, EX2 5DW, UK.
Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2023 Oct 19;408(1):412. doi: 10.1007/s00423-023-03148-0.
Social media (SoMe) is increasingly important in surgical education and may be necessary in the current learning environment. Whilst expanding in use and applications, few studies detail the impact of SoMe on measurable outcomes. The goal of this study was to quantify the impact of a dedicated SoMe strategy on engagement metrics for surgical research.
A retrospective review of a peer-reviewed surgical journal's Twitter microblog platform (@ColorectalDis) was performed from 6/2015 to 4/2021. A formal SoMe strategy was introduced in September 2018. Data were stratified into 2 time periods: pre-intervention (6-2015 to 9-2018) and post-SoMe intervention (9-2018 to 4-2021). The main outcome was the impact of the SoMe strategy on user engagement with the Twitter platform, journal, and traditional journal metrics. Twitter Analytics and Twitonomy were used to analyse engagement.
From conception to analysis, the microblog published 1198 original tweets, generating 5 million impressions and 231,000 engagements. Increased account activity (increased tweets published per month-5.51 vs 28.79; p < 0.01) was associated with significant engagement growth, including new monthly followers (213 vs 38; p < 0.01) and interactions with posted articles (4,096,167 vs 269,152; p < 0.01). Article downloads increased twenty-fold post-SoMe intervention (210,449 vs 10,934; p < 0.01), with significant increases in traditional journal metrics of new subscribers (+11%), article submissions (+24%), and impact factor (+0.9) (all p < 0.01).
SoMe directly impacts traditional journal metrics in surgical research. By examining the patterns of user engagement between SoMe and journal sites, the growing beneficial impact of a structured social media strategy and SoMe as an educational tool is demonstrated.
社交媒体(SoMe)在外科教育中变得越来越重要,在当前的学习环境中可能是必要的。尽管在使用和应用方面不断扩大,但很少有研究详细说明 SoMe 对可衡量结果的影响。本研究的目的是量化专门的 SoMe 策略对外科研究参与度指标的影响。
对 2015 年 6 月至 2021 年 4 月期间某同行评审外科杂志的 Twitter 微博平台(@ColorectalDis)进行回顾性研究。2018 年 9 月引入了正式的 SoMe 策略。数据分为 2 个时间段:干预前(2015 年 6 月至 2018 年 9 月)和 SoMe 干预后(2018 年 9 月至 2021 年 4 月)。主要结果是 SoMe 策略对 Twitter 平台、杂志和传统杂志指标的用户参与度的影响。使用 Twitter Analytics 和 Twitonomy 分析参与度。
从构思到分析,该微博共发布了 1198 条原创推文,产生了 500 万次展示和 23.1 万次互动。账户活跃度的增加(每月发布的推文数量增加-5.51 比 28.79;p < 0.01)与显著的参与度增长相关,包括新的每月关注者(213 比 38;p < 0.01)和与发布文章的互动(4096167 比 269152;p < 0.01)。SoMe 干预后,文章下载量增加了二十倍(210449 比 10934;p < 0.01),新订户的传统杂志指标(+11%)、文章提交量(+24%)和影响因子(+0.9)均有显著增加(均 p < 0.01)。
SoMe 直接影响外科研究的传统杂志指标。通过检查社交媒体和杂志网站之间用户参与度的模式,展示了结构化社交媒体策略和 SoMe 作为教育工具的日益增长的有益影响。