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首页> 外文期刊>Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges >'being the best we can be': Medical students' reflections on physician responsibility in the social media era
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'being the best we can be': Medical students' reflections on physician responsibility in the social media era

机译:“成为最好的”:医学生对社会媒体时代的医生责任的思考

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摘要

Purpose: To examine attitudes, self-reported behaviors, and intended actions related to medical students' use of online social media after an educational intervention. METHOD: In 2011, 180 first-year medical students at the Keck School of Medicine participated in a required two-hour session on the relevance of online social media use to professionalism. Students submitted postsession written reflections about their online presence and professional roles. The authors qualitatively analyzed and coded these reflections for emerging themes. They also examined postsession evaluations and conducted a four-month follow-up survey to identify changes in students' online social networking behaviors. RESULTS: All 180 students submitted written reflections and postsession evaluations. The authors identified 10 theme categories within three domains (immediate action, intended future action, value change) from the reflections. The most common themes were "role awareness" (144/539), "did nothing" (94/539), and "intention to edit" (84/539). On a scale of 1 to 5, students rated the overall session quality at 3.92 (standard deviation 0.28). Sixty-four percent (115/180) of the students responded to the follow-up survey. Of those, 40% (46/115) reported editing or changing their Web presence after the session, and 24% (28/115) anticipated spending less time on online social networking. CONCLUSIONS: Attending a required session in a professionalism course led to thoughtful reflection, increased professional role awareness, and intention to edit and monitor future online presence among first-year medical students. After four months, students reported continued monitoring and editing of their online presence. Future studies should examine whether reinforcement throughout training is needed to maintain vigilance.
机译:目的:研究的态度,自我报告的行为,教育干预后,有关医学生利用在线社交媒体的拟采取的行动。方法:在2011年,180第一年的医学生在医学院的Keck医学院参加了一个在线社交媒体的相关性需要两个小时的会议使用的敬业精神。提交了有关他们的在线状态和职业角色postsession书面思考的学生。作者定性分析和编码这些反射新兴主题。他们还研究postsession评估,进行了为期4个月的跟踪调查,以确定学生的网络社交行为的变化。结果:提交了书面的反射和postsession评估所有180名学生。笔者从鉴定的反射三个领域(立即行动,旨在未来的行动,价值变动)在10个主题类别。最常见的主题是“作用的认识”(539分之144),“无济于事”(539分之94),以及“用心编辑”(539分之84)。从1到5的等级,学生额定3.92整个会话质量(标准偏差0.28)。学生的百分之六十四(180分之115)回应了跟踪调查。其中,40%(115分之46)报告编辑或在会议结束后改变他们的网络的存在,和24%(一百十五分之二十八)预计在在线社交网络的时间越来越短。结论:在参加课程导致周到反思的专业性要求的会议,增加了专业的作用的认识,并有意编辑和监控未来的网上存在第一年医学生。四个月后,学生报告继续监测和他们的在线状态的编辑。未来的研究应审查整个培训增强是否需要保持警惕。

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    Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Building A 11 1000 S. Fremont Ave.;

    Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Building A 11 1000 S. Fremont Ave.;

    Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Building A 11 1000 S. Fremont Ave.;

    Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Building A 11 1000 S. Fremont Ave.;

    Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Building A 11 1000 S. Fremont Ave.;

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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 医药、卫生;
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