1st Edition

Social Media in Medicine

Edited By Margaret Chisolm Copyright 2016
    106 Pages
    by Routledge

    116 Pages
    by Routledge

    The use of social media around the world has exploded in recent years, with the number of monthly active users of Facebook and Twitter estimated to be one billion and one quarter billion, respectively. Physicians and medical trainees are among the users of social media, raising questions of how Facebook, Twitter, and other novel online tools may best be harnessed to further medical research, patient care, and educational pursuits. Because social media enables an immediate exchange of information and ideas around shared areas of interest, it has fostered communication and collaboration among a global network of researchers, clinicians, patients, and learners. Social Media in Medicine reviews a range of topics, from research ethics to medical education, and includes personal reflections by clinicians and learners that represent diverse opinions about the role of social media in medicine. The book is relevant to all healthcare stakeholders and will hopefully encourage ideas and questions to generate more research into the use of social media in medical research, patient care, and education. This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Review of Psychiatry.

    Introduction – Social media in medicine: The volume that Twitter built Margaret S. Chisolm

    1. Perspectives on social media in and as research: A synthetic review Natalie T. Lafferty and Annalisa Manca

    2. Ethical issues when using social media for health outside professional relationships Matthew Decamp

    3. Online professionalism: A synthetic review Katherine C. Chretien and Matthew G. Tuck

    4. Online social support networks Neil Mehta and Ashish Atreja

    5. Social media for lifelong learning Terry Kind and Yolanda Evans

    6. Live tweeting in medicine: ‘Tweeting the meeting’ Alexander M. Djuricich and Janine E. Zee-Cheng

    7. Social media and medical education: Exploring the potential of Twitter as a learning tool Alireza Jalali, Jonathan Sherbino, Jason Frank and Stephanie Sutherland

    8. Social media, medicine and the modern journal club Joel M. Topf and Swapnil Hiremath

    9. A personal reflection on social media in medicine: I stand, no wiser than before John Wiener

    10. Personal reflections on exploring social media in medicine Brent Thoma

    11. My three shrinks: Personal stories of social media exploration Steve Daviss, Annette Hanson and Dinah Miller

    Biography

    Margaret S. Chisolm is Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. She writes about substance use, humanistic practice, and medical education; and is a Miller-Coulson Academy of Clinical Excellence member, an Arnold P. Gold Foundation Humanism Scholar, and 2014 Johns Hopkins University Alumni Association Excellence in Teaching Award recipient.