Abstract

The increased use of social media in dentistry is associated with both advantages and disadvantages. A new form of professionalism, “e-professionalism,” has emerged. It includes an online persona and online information in any format that displays cues to professional identity, attitudes, and behaviors. The objective was to explore the perceptions of Malaysian and Finnish dental students on e-professionalism. A survey of 613 Malaysian and Finnish students was performed. The main variables assessed were posting of objectionable or inappropriate content among students, attitudes towards unprofessional online content, perceived online presence, contacts with patients and faculty members on social media, and concerns about social media use. The prevalence of posting clearly unprofessional content was not high among dental students. Revealing information of patients was most common content of clear unprofessionalism. Students from Malaysia contacted patients and faculty members more actively in social media than students in Finland (73.6% of students in Malaysia and 11.8% in Finland had invited faculty members to be “friends”). Malaysian students were more concerned and more likely to react to inappropriate content on social media. Attitude of dental students towards social media use in dentistry were very positive in both countries. Students agreed that guiding patients online is a new responsibility for dentists in the digital age (86.4% of students in Malaysia and 73.4% in Finland). The findings indicate the existence of both benefits and dangers of social media on e-professionalism among students. There is a need to include robust digital professionalism awareness training for students.

Highlights

  • Traditional professionalism refers to the conduct and behavior of the individual in upholding the social contract between society and their profession [1]

  • We focus on perceptions of e-professionalism and on the challenges that dental students may face with the use of communication technologies in dental education

  • Results dents didMalaysian not monitor their visibility on social media

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional professionalism refers to the conduct and behavior of the individual in upholding the social contract between society and their profession [1]. The increasing global use of social media, such as social networking, media sharing, blogging, and tweeting, among health care workers assists professional networking, collaboration, education, and training [2]. The perils include blurred professional boundaries, loosening accountability, and compromising confidentiality, impacting the traditional concepts of.

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