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首页> 外文期刊>Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges >Sounding Off on Social Media: The Ethics of Patient Storytelling in the Modern Era
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Sounding Off on Social Media: The Ethics of Patient Storytelling in the Modern Era

机译:在社交媒体上大声疾呼:现代时代的患者叙事伦理

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摘要

Use of social networking programs like Facebook and Twitter, which enable the public sharing of diverse content over the Internet, has risen dramatically in recent years. Although health professionals have faced consequences for clearly unethical online behavior, a relatively unexamined practice among medical students is the disclosure of patient care stories on social media in a manner that is technically compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, yet is ethically questionable. In this Perspective, the authors review three such cases in which students do not specifically reveal a patient's identity but share details of a personal nature, motivated by a variety of intentions (e.g., a desire to reflect on a meaningful experience, reaching out for social support in the event of a patient's death). Using ethical principles and professional policy recommendations, they discuss aspects of these postings that are potentially problematic. Consequences include the possibility of undermining public trust in the profession, inadvertently identifying patients, and violating expectations of privacy. The authors recommend that medical schools explicitly address these issues across the preclinical and clinical curricula and emphasize that patient-related postings on social media may carry inherent risks both to patients and to the profession.
机译:近年来,诸如Facebook和Twitter之类的社交网络程序使公众可以通过Internet共享各种内容,其使用量急剧增加。尽管卫生专业人员因明显不道德的在线行为而面临后果,但医学生之间相对未经审查的做法是在社交媒体上以技术上符合《健康保险可移植性和责任法案》的方式披露患者护理故事,但在道德上存在疑问。在这个观点中,作者回顾了三种这样的情况,在这种情况下,学生没有明确揭示患者的身份,而是出于各种意图(例如,渴望反思有意义的经历,寻求社会支持)而分享个人性质的细节。在患者死亡时提供支持)。他们使用道德原则和专业政策建议,讨论了这些帖子中可能存在问题的方面。后果包括有可能破坏公众对该行业的信任,无意中识别出患者以及侵犯隐私期望。作者建议医学院校在临床前和临床课程中明确解决这些问题,并强调在社交媒体上与患者相关的帖子可能给患者和专业带来固有风险。

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