Institutional health communication and social media: Exploring Italian hospitals’ use of social media pages

Author:

Fiammenghi Carlotta1ORCID,Covolo Loredana1,Vanoncini Anna1,Gelatti Umberto1,Ceretti Elisabetta1

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Public Health and Human Sciences, Department of Medical and Surgical Specialties, Radiological Sciences and Public Health, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy

Abstract

Introduction Hospitals play a potentially crucial role in public health, and social media can be powerful tools to reach their target audiences but are hospitals exploiting them to their full potential? Methods We retrieved the institutional webpages and the social media profiles (Facebook, Instagram, X (Twitter), YouTube, LinkedIn, WhatsApp and Telegram) of all Italian public hospitals located in regional capitals ( N = 194). From 1 March to 30 April 2022, we analysed these profiles, noting the number of followers and of posts published, the date of the last post, and the availability of a social media policy. We selected the most active 53 social media profiles (belonging to 33 hospital facilities) for a closer content analysis. Engagement was measured through numbers of reactions, comments and shares to posts published from 1 to 30 April 2022. Results About 36.6% of hospitals had a social media profile, and 18.3% had a social media policy. Most (87%) used Facebook as their main platform. They posted most frequently about hospital events and activities (48.3% of the socially active set). Overall, engagement was modest, as on average 0.62% of potential users reacted to a post. The same post often appeared without modifications across different platforms (82.3% of cases for Instagram, 37.8% for X (Twitter) compared to Facebook). Conclusions Italian public hospitals did not seem to have a clear social media policy nor strategy, and social media remained underused. Italian hospitals, therefore, appeared to be missing valuable opportunities to reach out to their patients and communities.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference14 articles.

1. World Health Organization. WHO strategic communications framework for effective communications, https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/documents/communicating-for-health/communication-framework.pdf (2017, accessed 25 September 2023).

2. The Impact of Social Media on Medical Professionalism: A Systematic Qualitative Review of Challenges and Opportunities

3. It is time for health institutions to invest in persuasive communication to combat low quality information: A lesson learned from the COVID-19 infodemic

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