医疗保健中的社交媒体:探索希腊医疗保健专业人员使用社交媒体的情况。

IF 2.5 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Informatics for Health & Social Care Pub Date : 2022-01-02 Epub Date: 2021-04-10 DOI:10.1080/17538157.2021.1906256
Ioannis Katsas, Ioannis Apostolakis, Iraklis Varlamis
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行期间出现的封锁限制改变了人们的生活、工作和互动方式。与此同时,它改变了世界各地卫生保健专业人员和国家卫生保健系统在这场公共卫生之战中的战斗方式。社交媒体(SoMe)在这场斗争中发挥了信息作用,全球近三分之一的人口是社交媒体平台的活跃用户。随着互联网用户越来越多地在社交媒体平台上搜索健康信息,当代卫生保健系统试图找到更积极地与某些人接触的方法。因此,保健部门出现了新的需求方面的杠杆,同时也给利益攸关方带来了新的机会和风险。我们的研究调查了希腊173名卫生保健专业人员的回答。有些人会留在这里,大多数卫生保健专业人员在他们的职业生涯中接受他们。在我们的队列中,卫生信息的质量和希腊卫生保健专业人员的工作环境有助于对社交媒体在卫生保健中的使用的态度和看法。
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Social media in health care: Exploring its use by health-care professionals in Greece.

The lockdown restrictions that have emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic have reshaped the way people live, work, and interact with each other. At the same time, it changed the way health-care professionals and national health-care systems around the world are fighting in this battle for public health. Social media (SoMe) have played their informational role in this fight with almost one-third of the world's population being active users of social media platforms. Contemporary health-care systems have tried to find ways to engage more actively with SoMe as Internet users are increasingly searching for health information on social media platforms. As a result, new demand-side levers arise in the health-care sector along with new opportunities and risks for the stakeholders. Our study looked into the responses of 173 health-care professionals in Greece. SoMe are here to stay and the majority of health-care professionals embrace them in their professional lives. Quality in health information and the work context of Greek health-care professionals in our cohort contribute to attitudes and perceptions of social media use in health care.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
21
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Informatics for Health & Social Care promotes evidence-based informatics as applied to the domain of health and social care. It showcases informatics research and practice within the many and diverse contexts of care; it takes personal information, both its direct and indirect use, as its central focus. The scope of the Journal is broad, encompassing both the properties of care information and the life-cycle of associated information systems. Consideration of the properties of care information will necessarily include the data itself, its representation, structure, and associated processes, as well as the context of its use, highlighting the related communication, computational, cognitive, social and ethical aspects. Consideration of the life-cycle of care information systems includes full range from requirements, specifications, theoretical models and conceptual design through to sustainable implementations, and the valuation of impacts. Empirical evidence experiences related to implementation are particularly welcome. Informatics in Health & Social Care seeks to consolidate and add to the core knowledge within the disciplines of Health and Social Care Informatics. The Journal therefore welcomes scientific papers, case studies and literature reviews. Examples of novel approaches are particularly welcome. Articles might, for example, show how care data is collected and transformed into useful and usable information, how informatics research is translated into practice, how specific results can be generalised, or perhaps provide case studies that facilitate learning from experience.
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