Abstract

BackgroundOne-third of Americans use social media websites as a source of health care information. Twitter, a microblogging site that allows users to place 280-character posts—or tweets—on the Web, is emerging as an important social media platform for health care. However, most guidelines on medical professionalism on social media are based on expert opinion.ObjectiveThis study sought to examine if provider Twitter profiles with educational tweets were viewed as more professional than profiles with personal tweets or a mixture of the two, and to determine the impact of provider gender on perceptions of professionalism in an academic obstetrics and gynecology clinic.MethodsThis study randomized obstetrics and gynecology patients at the University of Michigan Von Voigtlander Clinic to view one of six medical provider Twitter profiles, which differed in provider gender and the nature of tweets. Each participant answered 10 questions about their perception of the provider’s professionalism based on the Twitter profile content.ResultsThe provider profiles with educational tweets alone received higher mean professionalism scores than profiles with personal tweets. Specifically, the female and male provider profiles with exclusively educational tweets had the highest and second highest overall mean professionalism ratings at 4.24 and 3.85, respectively. In addition, the female provider profiles received higher mean professionalism ratings than male provider profiles with the same content. The female profile with mixed content received a mean professionalism rating of 3.38 compared to 3.24 for the male mixed-content profile, and the female profile with only personal content received a mean professionalism rating of 3.68 compared to 2.68 for the exclusively personal male provider profile.ConclusionsThis study showed that in our obstetrics and gynecology clinic, patients perceived providers with educational profiles as more professional than those with a mixture of educational and personal tweets or only personal tweets. It also showed that our patient population perceived the female provider with educational tweets to be the most professional. This study will help inform the development of evidence-based guidelines for social media use in medicine as it adds to the growing body of literature examining professionalism and social media.

Highlights

  • Social media is a form of online communication, such as websites for social networking and microblogging, through which users can create online communities to share information, ideas, personal messages, and other content [1,2]

  • Obstetrics and gynecology patients were randomized to view a screenshot from the Twitter profile of one of six different fictitious providers and rate their professionalism based on the content of the tweets viewed

  • Professionalism serves as the foundation of the patient-provider relationship

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Summary

Introduction

Social media is a form of online communication, such as websites for social networking and microblogging, through which users can create online communities to share information, ideas, personal messages, and other content [1,2]. 90% of physicians use social media for personal reasons and 67% use it professionally [11,12] It serves as a way for health care providers to provide health education, connect with patients, and increase market share via a unique platform that allows information to be disseminated beyond the capabilities of traditional digital media—such as webpages—which makes it an attractive tool for organizations and individual professionals [13]. This capacity to reach a large audience increases the likelihood of unknown users interacting with the site [13]. This study will help inform the development of evidence-based guidelines for social media use in medicine as it adds to the growing body of literature examining professionalism and social media

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