Abstract
PurposeSocial media has made a revolutionary change in the relationship between the customers and business or service providers by enabling customers to publish and share feedback and views about product or service quality. This revolutionary change has not been echoed in some healthcare systems. This study analyses the social media policies of healthcare regulatory authorities in Ontario and explores how these policies encourage or discourage healthcare professionals' use of social media for collecting patient stories and understanding patient experience.Design/methodology/approachThe study used qualitative content analysis to analyse the policy documents, focusing on the manifest themes in these documents. It used convenient sampling to select 12 organizations, including regulating and licensing bodies and health service delivery organizations in Ontario. The authors collected 24 documents from these organizations, including policies, practice standards and social media learning materials.FindingsIn Ontario's healthcare system, social media is perceived as a source of risks to the healthcare professions and professionals. Healthcare regulators emphasize that the codes of conduct and professional standards extend to social media. The study found no systematic recognition of patient stories on social media as a source of information on healthcare quality that can be useful for healthcare professionals.Originality/valueThe study identifies potential unintended consequences of social media policies in the healthcare system and calls for policy and cultural changes to enable the development of safe social media platforms that can facilitate interaction between healthcare providers and patients, when necessary, without the fear of legal consequences or privacy breaches.
Subject
Health Policy,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference95 articles.
1. What is patient experience?;Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality;Rockville,2017
2. Social media in public health care: impact domain propositions;Government Information Quarterly,2012
3. Patients' and health professionals' use of social media in health care: motives, barriers and expectations;Patient Education and Counseling,2013
4. Boundary crossings and violations in clinical settings,2012
5. Social media? It's serious! Understanding the dark side of social media;European Management Journal,2018
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Mapping the field of social media management – A bibliometric analysis;SA Journal of Information Management;2023-12-22
2. IJHG review 27.1;International Journal of Health Governance;2022-02-11