Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers

BackgroundThe traditional vertical system of sharing information from sources of scientific authority passed down to the public through local health authorities and clinicians risks being made obsolete by emerging technologies that facilitate rapid horizontal information sharing. The rise of Public...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keller, Brett, Labrique, Alain, Jain, Kriti M, Pekosz, Andrew, Levine, Orin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-01-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2014/1/e8/
_version_ 1818883520532054016
author Keller, Brett
Labrique, Alain
Jain, Kriti M
Pekosz, Andrew
Levine, Orin
author_facet Keller, Brett
Labrique, Alain
Jain, Kriti M
Pekosz, Andrew
Levine, Orin
author_sort Keller, Brett
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundThe traditional vertical system of sharing information from sources of scientific authority passed down to the public through local health authorities and clinicians risks being made obsolete by emerging technologies that facilitate rapid horizontal information sharing. The rise of Public Health 2.0 requires professional acknowledgment that a new and substantive forum of public discourse about public health exists on social media, such as forums, blogs, Facebook, and Twitter. ObjectiveSome public health professionals have used social media in innovative ways: to surveil populations, gauge public opinion, disseminate health information, and promote mutually beneficial interactions between public health professionals and the lay public. Although innovation is on the rise, most in the public health establishment remain skeptical of this rapidly evolving landscape or are unclear about how it could be used. We sought to evaluate the extent to which public health professionals are engaged in these spaces. MethodsWe conducted a survey of professorial- and scientist-track faculty at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. We asked all available faculty via email to complete a 30-question survey about respondent characteristics, beliefs about social media, and usage of specific technologies, including blogs, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. ResultsA total of 181 (19.8%) of 912 professor- and scientist-track faculty provided usable responses. The majority of respondents rarely used major social media platforms. Of these 181 respondents, 97 (53.6%) had used YouTube, 84 (46.4%) had used Facebook, 55 (30.4%) had read blogs, and 12 (6.6%) had used Twitter in the prior month. More recent degree completion was the best predictor of higher usage of social media. In all, 122 (67.4%) agreed that social media is important for disseminating information, whereas only 55 (30.4%) agreed that social media is useful for their research. In all, 43 (23.8%) said social media was helpful for professional career advancement, whereas 72 (39.8%) said it was not. Only 43 (23.8%) faculty said they would employ a full- or part-time social media consultant, and 30 (16.6%) currently employed one. ConclusionsDespite near-universal appreciation of the potential for social media to serve as a component of public health strategy, a small minority are actually engaged in this space professionally, whereas most are either disinterested or actively opposed to professional engagement. Social media is seen by most as more useful for spreading information than obtaining it. As public discourse on a number of critical health topics continues to be influenced and sometimes shaped by discussions online from Twitter to Facebook, it would seem that greater discourse is needed about when and how public health professionals should engage in these media, and also how personal, institutional, and professional barriers to greater use of social media may be overcome.
first_indexed 2024-12-19T15:34:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-766e759726724b2aac680454163b309b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1438-8871
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-19T15:34:58Z
publishDate 2014-01-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
spelling doaj.art-766e759726724b2aac680454163b309b2022-12-21T20:15:37ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712014-01-01161e810.2196/jmir.2982Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health ResearchersKeller, BrettLabrique, AlainJain, Kriti MPekosz, AndrewLevine, OrinBackgroundThe traditional vertical system of sharing information from sources of scientific authority passed down to the public through local health authorities and clinicians risks being made obsolete by emerging technologies that facilitate rapid horizontal information sharing. The rise of Public Health 2.0 requires professional acknowledgment that a new and substantive forum of public discourse about public health exists on social media, such as forums, blogs, Facebook, and Twitter. ObjectiveSome public health professionals have used social media in innovative ways: to surveil populations, gauge public opinion, disseminate health information, and promote mutually beneficial interactions between public health professionals and the lay public. Although innovation is on the rise, most in the public health establishment remain skeptical of this rapidly evolving landscape or are unclear about how it could be used. We sought to evaluate the extent to which public health professionals are engaged in these spaces. MethodsWe conducted a survey of professorial- and scientist-track faculty at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. We asked all available faculty via email to complete a 30-question survey about respondent characteristics, beliefs about social media, and usage of specific technologies, including blogs, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. ResultsA total of 181 (19.8%) of 912 professor- and scientist-track faculty provided usable responses. The majority of respondents rarely used major social media platforms. Of these 181 respondents, 97 (53.6%) had used YouTube, 84 (46.4%) had used Facebook, 55 (30.4%) had read blogs, and 12 (6.6%) had used Twitter in the prior month. More recent degree completion was the best predictor of higher usage of social media. In all, 122 (67.4%) agreed that social media is important for disseminating information, whereas only 55 (30.4%) agreed that social media is useful for their research. In all, 43 (23.8%) said social media was helpful for professional career advancement, whereas 72 (39.8%) said it was not. Only 43 (23.8%) faculty said they would employ a full- or part-time social media consultant, and 30 (16.6%) currently employed one. ConclusionsDespite near-universal appreciation of the potential for social media to serve as a component of public health strategy, a small minority are actually engaged in this space professionally, whereas most are either disinterested or actively opposed to professional engagement. Social media is seen by most as more useful for spreading information than obtaining it. As public discourse on a number of critical health topics continues to be influenced and sometimes shaped by discussions online from Twitter to Facebook, it would seem that greater discourse is needed about when and how public health professionals should engage in these media, and also how personal, institutional, and professional barriers to greater use of social media may be overcome.http://www.jmir.org/2014/1/e8/
spellingShingle Keller, Brett
Labrique, Alain
Jain, Kriti M
Pekosz, Andrew
Levine, Orin
Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
Journal of Medical Internet Research
title Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
title_full Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
title_fullStr Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
title_full_unstemmed Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
title_short Mind the Gap: Social Media Engagement by Public Health Researchers
title_sort mind the gap social media engagement by public health researchers
url http://www.jmir.org/2014/1/e8/
work_keys_str_mv AT kellerbrett mindthegapsocialmediaengagementbypublichealthresearchers
AT labriquealain mindthegapsocialmediaengagementbypublichealthresearchers
AT jainkritim mindthegapsocialmediaengagementbypublichealthresearchers
AT pekoszandrew mindthegapsocialmediaengagementbypublichealthresearchers
AT levineorin mindthegapsocialmediaengagementbypublichealthresearchers