The Impact of Social Media for Hand Surgeons: A Prevalence and Correlation Study With Online and Academic Reputations

Sameer R. Khawaja BS , Krishna N. Chopra MA , Musab Gulzar BS , Ozair R. Khawaja HS , Shammah E. Udoudo BS , Joseph G. Monir MD , Michael B. Gottschalk MD , Adrian L. Huang MD , Nina Suh MD , Eric R. Wagner MD, MS
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

This study examines the influence of social media use among orthopedic and plastic-trained hand surgeons on patient-reported ratings online and academic productivity.

Methods

The American Society of Surgery of the Hand directory was queried for actively practicing orthopedic and plastic surgeons with a hand surgery fellowship. Each name was searched on various social media platforms. Average ratings, number of reviews, and number of comments were collected from Healthgrades, Google reviews, and Vitals. H-index was searched on Scopus. A summated social media presence score was calculated to identify the top 20% of social media users in each cohort.

Results

A total of 97 orthopedic and 102 plastic surgeons were included. Overall, plastic surgeons were more active on social media compared to orthopedic surgeons. There was a positive association between having active profiles and Healthgrades ratings. When looking within the subgroups, the top 20% of social media orthopedic users were found to have a significantly higher mean Healthgrades rating and a mean number of comments than the rest of the cohort. On Vitals, the top 20% of social media users had higher mean ratings compared to the remaining 80%. The top 20% of plastics social media users had a significantly higher average Healthgrades rating compared to the rest of the plastics group. On Google reviews, the top 20% also had higher mean ratings, as well as mean number of ratings, compared to the rest of the cohort. Plastic surgeons with a Twitter/X account had a significantly higher h-index than plastic surgeons without a Twitter/X account (14.5 vs 9.2, P < .05).

Conclusions

Social media involvement is positively associated with surgeon ratings and the number of reviews and comments on physician rating websites. Using web-based marketing tools is still rare in hand surgery, especially among orthopedic surgeons.

Type of study/level of evidence

Economic/decision analysis IV.
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1.10
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0.00%
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111
审稿时长
12 weeks
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