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10.2196/publichealth.4831

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.2196/publichealth.4831
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C4869231!4869231!27227154
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suck abstract from ncbi


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pmid27227154      JMIR+Public+Health+Surveill 2016 ; 2 (1): ä
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  • Medical Institutions and Twitter: A Novel Tool for Public Communication in Japan #MMPMID27227154
  • Nakata Y; Woodham L; Bond C; Fernandez-Luque L; Sugawara Y; Narimatsu H; Tsuya A; Tanaka A; Fukao A
  • JMIR Public Health Surveill 2016[Jan]; 2 (1): ä PMID27227154show ga
  • Background: Twitter is a free social networking and microblogging service on the Internet. Medical professionals and patients have started to use Twitter in medicine. Twitter use by medical institutions can interactively and efficiently provide public health information and education for laypeople. Objective: This study examined Twitter usage by medical institutions. Methods: We reviewed all Japanese user accounts in which the names of medical institutions were described in the user?s Twitter profile. We then classified medical institutions? tweets by content. Results: We extracted 168 accounts for medical institutions with ?500 followers. The medical specialties of those accounts were dentistry and oral surgery (n=73), dermatology (n=12), cosmetic surgery (n=10), internal medicine (n=10), ophthalmology (n=6), obstetrics and gynecology (n=5), plastic surgery (n=2), and others (n=50). Of these, 21 accounts tweeted medical knowledge and 45 accounts tweeted guidance about medical practice and consultation hours, including advertisements. In the dentistry and oral surgery accounts, individual behavior or thinking was the most frequent (22/71, 31%) content. On the other hand, consultation including advertisements was the most frequent (14/23, 61%) in cosmetic surgery, plastic surgery, and dermatology. Conclusions: Some medical specialties used Twitter for disseminating medical knowledge or guidance including advertisements. This indicates that Twitter potentially can be used for various purposes by different medical specialties.
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