Abstract

BackgroundTwitter is becoming an important tool in medicine, but there is little information on Twitter metrics. In order to recommend best practices for information dissemination and diffusion, it is important to first study and analyze the networks.ObjectiveThis study describes the characteristics of four medical networks, analyzes their theoretical dissemination potential, their actual dissemination, and the propagation and distribution of tweets.MethodsOpen Twitter data was used to characterize four networks: the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and the American College of Physicians (ACP). Data were collected between July 2012 and September 2012. Visualization was used to understand the follower overlap between the groups. Actual flow of the tweets for each group was assessed. Tweets were examined using Topsy, a Twitter data aggregator.ResultsThe theoretical information dissemination potential for the groups is large. A collective community is emerging, where large percentages of individuals are following more than one of the groups. The overlap across groups is small, indicating a limited amount of community cohesion and cross-fertilization. The AMA followers’ network is not as active as the other networks. The AMA posted the largest number of tweets while the AAP posted the fewest. The number of retweets for each organization was low indicating dissemination that is far below its potential.ConclusionsTo increase the dissemination potential, medical groups should develop a more cohesive community of shared followers. Tweet content must be engaging to provide a hook for retweeting and reaching potential audience. Next steps call for content analysis, assessment of the behavior and actions of the messengers and the recipients, and a larger-scale study that considers other medical groups using Twitter.

Highlights

  • BackgroundSocial media, including Facebook and Twitter, is fast becoming an important tool in health care

  • At the time of our study, the American Medical Association (AMA) had the largest number of followers—and information diffusion potential—and was trailed by the Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), and American College of Physicians (ACP), respectively

  • This study attempted to describe the characteristics of four medical networks and analyze their theoretical information dissemination potential, their actual information dissemination, their information sharers, and their propagation and distribution of tweets

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundSocial media, including Facebook and Twitter, is fast becoming an important tool in health care. The microblogging medium, has been hailed as “an essential tool for every physician leader” [3], one that is “crucial to the development of medicine today” [4], and “just what the doctor ordered” [5]. This rapidly growing social network has approximately 500 million users worldwide, 140 million of them in the United States [6]. Objective: This study describes the characteristics of four medical networks, analyzes their theoretical dissemination potential, their actual dissemination, and the propagation and distribution of tweets. Conclusions: To increase the dissemination potential, medical groups should develop a more cohesive community of shared followers. Steps call for content analysis, assessment of the behavior and actions of the messengers and the recipients, and a larger-scale study that considers other medical groups using Twitter

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