http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23985172
The Impact of Social Media on Medical Professionalism: A Systematic Qualitative Review of Challenges and Opportunities.
Source
Institute
for History, Ethics and Philosophy of Medicine, CELLS-Centre for Ethics
and Law in the Life Science, Hannover Medical School, Hannover,
Germany.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The rising impact of social media
on the private and working lives of health care professionals has made
researchers and health care institutions study and rethink the concept
and content of medical professionalism in the digital age. In the last
decade, several specific policies, original research studies, and
comments have been published on the responsible use of social media by health care professionals. However, there is no systematic literature review that analyzes the full spectrum of (1) social media-related challenges imposed on medical professionalism and (2) social media-related opportunities to both undermine and improve medical professionalism.
OBJECTIVE:
The aim of this systematic qualitative review is to present this full spectrum of social media-related challenges and opportunities.
METHODS:
We
performed a systematic literature search in PubMed (restricted to
English and German literature published between 2002 and 2011) for
papers that address social media-related
challenges and opportunities for medical professionalism. To
operationalize "medical professionalism", we refer to the 10 commitments
presented in the physicians' charter "Medical professionalism in the
new millennium" published by the ABIM Foundation. We applied qualitative
text analysis to categorize the spectrum of social media-related challenges and opportunities for medical professionalism.
RESULTS:
The
literature review retrieved 108 references, consisting of 46 original
research studies and 62 commentaries, editorials, or opinion papers. All
references together mentioned a spectrum of 23 broad and 12
further-specified, narrow categories for social media-related
opportunities (n=10) and challenges (n=13) for medical professionalism,
grouped under the 10 commitments of the physicians' charter.
CONCLUSIONS:
The accommodation of the traditional core values of medicine to the characteristics of social media
presents opportunities as well as challenges for medical
professionalism. As a profession that is entitled to self-regulation,
health care professionals should proactively approach these challenges
and seize the opportunities. There should be room to foster
interprofessional and intergenerational dialogue (and eventually
guidelines and policies) on both challenges and opportunities of social media
in modern health care. This review builds a unique source of
information that can inform further research and policy development in
this regard.
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