Abstract

Medical volunteers from high-income countries seek short-term global health experiences in low- and middle-income countries to learn and practice medicine, complete service-learning projects, conduct research, and burnish their curricula vitae. The uniqueness and poignancy of these global health experiences frequently compel medical volunteers to not only capture visual reminders of their experience but to share them online through social media. Prioritizing image creation and sharing, which center on the volunteer's priorities over patient-centered priorities, risks failing to acknowledge the ethical issues inherent in power imbalances between the medical volunteers, patients, hosts, organizational partners and others, and bypasses the values of the host community. Using social media as an example of an emerging ethical challenge in the context of short-term experiences in global health, the authors examine potential consequences for patients, host communities, and international partnerships and discuss important pre-posting considerations.

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