3. WHY CREATE A SOCIAL
MEDIA PRESENCE
Professional
WHAT TO CONSIDER
PROTECT ONLINE
REPUTATION
4. To maintain appropriate
professional boundaries
physicians should consider
separating personal
and professional
content online.
“
Photo by Beautiful Revelry
https://flic.kr/p/e2g7oD
“AMA Policy: Professionalism in the Use of Media.”
American Medical Association, 2012 Annual Meeting.
http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/meeting/professionalism-social-media.shtml
21. Image by alvaro_cabrera on freepik.com
MAKE SURPRISING CONNECTIONS
http://www.marjoriestieglermd.com/21-ways-physicians-can-and-should-use-social-media/?hvid=5CCAzc
5
31. Dr. Bryan Vartabedian
We can’t value what we don’t
understand. And we’ll only
understand what something can
offer by poking at it and trying it in
different ways. The world is
increasingly networked. And when
you find the right place to connect,
share and create, you’re likely to
find value.
“
32. WHY CREATE A SOCIAL
MEDIA PRESENCE
Professional
WHAT TO CONSIDER
PROTECT ONLINE
REPUTATION
33. Facebook for connecting with people
you went to school with
Twitter for connecting with people
you WISH you went to school with
http://www.diffen.com/difference/Facebook_vs_Twitter
34. WHY I LIKE TWITTER BETTER THAN FACEBOOK
Blimey Cow, https://youtu.be/9wNNMSp72K0
36. THE BEST WAY TO CONTROL WHAT KINDS OF
INFORMATION OTHERS WILL FIND ABOUT US
ONLINE IS TO PROVIDE QUALITY CONTENT
AND CREATE WELL-DESIGNED
PROFILES OURSELVES.
“
Bertalan Mesko, Social Media in Clinical Practice
37. www.healthxph.net/manifesto
I will value the patient’s
dignity & privacy by not
taking selfies, groufies or
videos during encounters
with patients that include
patients’ body parts,
surgical specimens or that
show patients in the
background without their
consent.
#HEALTHXPH
39. — Karen Michelle Devon, MD
I WAS SURPRISED TO FIND AN IMAGE OF
MYSELF, WEARING SCRUBS, AND
HOLDING A THYROID GLAND.
”
“
Devon KM. JAMA 2013;309(18):1901-1902
40. Palacios-Gonzalez C. The ethics of clinical photography & social media.
Med Health Care & Philos DOI 10.1007/s11019-014-9580-y
USE OF CLINICAL PHOTOGRAPHY
PRIMARY
For patient care
SECONDARY
For research and
medical education
41. Even if patients recant consent, nearly impossible
to retrieve or delete clinical images.
Palacios-Gonzalez C. The ethics of clinical photography & social media.
Med Health Care & Philos DOI 10.1007/s11019-014-9580-y
Moderate comments to avoid derogatory remarks
about clinical images or patients depicted.
SECONDARY
42. PATIENT IDENTIFIERS
Names
Geographic information
Dates (eg. birth date, admission date,
discharge date, date of death)
Telephone numbers
Fax numbers
Email addresses
Social security numbers
Medical record numbers
Health plan beneficiary numbers
Account numbers
Certificate/license numbers
Vehicle identifiers & serial numbers,
including license plate numbers
Device identifiers and serial numbers
URLs
IP address numbers
Biometric identifiers (eg. finger and voice prints)
Full-face photographic images & any
comparable images
Other unique identifying numbers,
characteristics or codes
Protected health
information
any medical information
about a specific patient
in combination with any
information that could be
used to identify that patient
43.
44. WHY CREATE A SOCIAL
MEDIA PRESENCE
Professional
WHAT TO CONSIDER
PROTECT ONLINE
REPUTATION
45. Ensuring public trust while
engaging on social media
platforms
Commitment to
professional responsibilities
Gholami-Kordkheili F, Wild V, Strech D. J Med Internet Res 2013;15(8):e184
Don’t lie. Don’t pry.
Don’t cheat. Can’t delete.
Don’t steal. Don’t reveal.
A 12-word Social Media Policy
Farris Timimi, Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
If it’s on the Internet, it isn’t private by DonkeyHotey,
https://flic.kr/p/9RYZvc
46. Social media is a
window through which
we ask people to look.
How big we make the
window is up to us, as
is what we do in front
of the window.
Journal of the American Pharmacists Association Nov/Dec 2013doi: 10.1331/JAPhA.2013.13536