Telemedicine and social media: A contemporary analysis of the most shared content by internet users

Author:

Mirone Vincenzo,Di Bello FrancescoORCID,Morra SimoneORCID,Califano Gianluigi,Cirillo Luigi,Abate Marco,Fusco Giovanni Maria,Luzzago Stefano,Mirone Claudia,Napolitano LuigiORCID,La Rocca Roberto,Creta Massimiliano,Celentano Giuseppe,Capece MarcoORCID,Musi Gennaro,Mangiapia Francesco,Longo Nicola,Collà Ruvolo ClaudiaORCID

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the telemedicine information published on the most popular social media platforms, during the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic.Methods: We queried the BuzzSumo tool to identify related telemedicine article links that were shared most on social media, from February 2021 to February 2022. The PEMAT-P was used for the quality assessment of the most shared links.Results: 125 links were eligible for the analysis. Facebook was the most used social media platform for sharing articles (median engagement: 1000). Most of the articles were published by magazines (n = 82, 65.6%) and the main topic addressed was general information (n = 49, 39.2%). In the subgroup analyses of the 34 most shared articles, Facebook was the most used social media platform (median engagement:1950), most of the articles were published by magazines (n = 24, 70.6%), whereas the main topic addressed was the prescription of the abortion pill (n = 9, 26.5%). According to the PEMAT-P tool, the median understandability and actionability score was 63.8 and 20%, respectively.Conclusions: The interest in telemedicine has increased all over the world, as evidenced by the high engagement in social media articles, recorded during the last year. However, the access to digital health services is still limited, the information provided is often not verified by an official entity and unable to fill the digital divide exacerbated by COVID 19 pandemic crisis. Hence, health policy should be developed or modified to ensure a more egalitarian Internet access for all citizens. Official medical institutions should standardize telemedicine regulation and online content to reduce the widespread of misleading information.

Publisher

PAGEPress Publications

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