在大学生中,来自在线社交媒体的社会资本与每年至少拜访一次医疗保健从业者有关。

Joshua Fogel, Ashaney Ewen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

社会资本与医疗保健的获取(如医疗保健从业者的访问)呈正相关。似乎没有任何关于社会资本通过在线社交媒体及其与医疗保健访问(如医疗保健从业者访问)的关联的文献。本文通过在线社交媒体使用研究社会资本与医疗保健从业者访问之间的关系。方法:对2017年纽约市663名接触社交媒体处方药广告的参与者(如Facebook、Twitter、LinkedIn、Instagram、YouTube)的数据进行分析。主要的预测变量是每年至少去看一次保健医生。结果变量为连接社会资本和连接来自在线社会媒体的社会资本。结果:那些每年至少访问一次保健医生的人比那些每年至少访问一次保健医生的人有更大的来自在线社交媒体的平均粘合社会资本和桥梁社会资本。多元线性回归分析显示,每年至少不去看一次保健医生也有类似的模式(结合社会资本:b=-5.31, SE=1.68, p=0.002;桥接社会资本:b=-3.27, SE=1.55, p=0.04)。结论:政府机构、医疗从业人员和医疗机构应继续通过在线社交媒体对年轻人进行营销和传播健康教育。这种公共卫生在线社交媒体健康教育可能被年轻人认为是连接社会资本和/或桥接社会资本,这可能与更多的年轻人每年至少访问一次医疗保健从业人员有关。
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Social Capital from Online Social Media is Associated with Visiting a Healthcare Practitioner at Least Once a Year Among College Students.

: Social capital is positively associated with healthcare access such as healthcare practitioner visits. There does not appear to be any literature on social capital through online social media and its association with healthcare access such as healthcare practitioner visits. This paper studies the relationship between social capital through online social media use and healthcare practitioner visits. Methods: Data were analyzed from 663 participants in New York City in 2017 with exposure to social media prescription medication advertisements from social media (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube). The main predictor variable was visiting a healthcare practitioner at least once a year. Outcome variables were bonding social capital and bridging social capital from online social media. Results: Those who visited a healthcare practitioner at least once a year had greater mean bonding social capital and bridging social capital from online social media than those who did not visit a healthcare practitioner at least once a year. Multivariate linear regression analyses showed a similar pattern for not visiting a healthcare practitioner at least once a year (bonding social capital: b=-5.31, SE=1.68, p=0.002; bridging social capital: b=-3.27, SE=1.55, p=0.04). Conclusions: Government organizations, healthcare practitioners, and healthcare organizations should continue marketing and disseminating health education for young adults through online social media. This public health online social media health education is likely to be considered bonding social capital and/or bridging social capital by young adults and this may be associated with more young adults visiting healthcare practitioners at least once a year.

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