A Descriptive Analysis of the Use of Twitter by Emergency Medicine Residency Programs

Author:

Diller David1,Yarris Lalena M.1

Affiliation:

1. David Diller, MD, is Assistant Residency Program Director, Los Angeles County + University of Southern California (USC), Department of Emergency Medicine, and Assistant Professor of Clinical Emergency Medicine, Keck School of Medicine of USC; and Lalena M. Yarris, MD, MCR, is Associate Professor and Co-Director, Education Section, Department of Emergency Medicine, Residency Program Director, Depa

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background  Twitter is increasingly recognized as an instructional tool by the emergency medicine (EM) community. In 2012, the Council of Residency Directors in Emergency Medicine (CORD) recommended that EM residency programs' Twitter accounts be managed solely by faculty. To date, little has been published regarding the patterns of Twitter use by EM residency programs. Objective  We analyzed current patterns in Twitter use among EM residency programs with accounts and assessed conformance with CORD recommendations. Methods  In this mixed methods study, a 6-question, anonymous survey was distributed via e-mail using SurveyMonkey. In addition, a Twitter-based search was conducted, and the public profiles of EM residency programs' Twitter accounts were analyzed. We calculated descriptive statistics and performed a qualitative analysis on the data. Results  Of 168 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education–accredited EM programs, 88 programs (52%) responded. Of those programs, 58% (51 of 88) reported having a program-level Twitter account. Residents served as content managers for those accounts in the majority of survey respondents (61%, 28 of 46). Most programs did not publicly disclose the identity or position of their Twitter content manager. We found a wide variety of applications for Twitter, with EM programs most frequently using Twitter for educational and promotional purposes. There is significant variability in the numbers of followers for EM programs' Twitter accounts. Conclusions  Applications and usage among EM residency programs are varied, and are frequently not consistent with current CORD recommendations.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine

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