沙特阿拉伯一所大学医院医学生使用社交媒体和分享患者信息的道德问题:横断面调查

IF 3.2 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Sara Farsi, Alaa Sabbahi, Deyala Sait, Raghad Kabli, Ghaliah Abduljabar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:社交媒体(SM)已经成为许多医学生生活中不可或缺的一部分,随着他们医学生涯的许多方面出现在网上,社交媒体模糊了他们个人身份和职业身份之间的界限。医生必须了解如何负责任地浏览这些网站。目的:本研究旨在了解医学生使用SM的情况,以及他们对电子职业道德准则的认知和遵守情况。方法:这是一项横断面研究,是一项在线自愿调查,对象是沙特阿拉伯吉达阿卜杜勒阿齐兹国王大学医院的高年级医学生。我们调查了有多少学生使用SM,他们的隐私设置,他们可能违反的道德标准,以及他们在网上对培训机构的描述。结果:共有400/1546(26%)医学生参与调查。在参与者中,95/400(24%)拥有公共SM账户,162/400(41%)同时拥有私人和公共账户。在违反电子专业方面,11/400(3%)的参与者未经允许在SM上发布患者的照片,75/400(20%)的参与者未经允许在SM上发布部分切除器官或x光片,60/400(16%)的参与者讨论患者。在分享医学院信息方面,108/400(29%)的参与者讨论了他们所在医学院发生的事件,119/400(31%)的参与者未经演讲者允许在网上分享讲座。大约66%的参与者报告说,他们不知道他们的机构是否有SM使用的专业行为准则,259/371(70%)没有接受过专业使用SM的培训。结论:必须教导医学生认识到不适当的网络行为,了解他们作为医学院代表的角色,并了解不专业行为对SM的潜在影响。这可以通过举办关于电子专业的讲习班、定期研讨会,以及在现有的道德课程中纳入电子管理人员的行为原则来实现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ethical Use of Social Media and Sharing of Patient Information by Medical Students at a University Hospital in Saudi Arabia: Cross-Sectional Survey.

Background: Social media (SM) has become an integral part of many medical students' lives, blurring the lines between their personal and professional identities as many aspects of their medical careers appear online. Physicians must understand how to responsibly navigate these sites.

Objective: This study aimed to identify how medical students use SM and their awareness and adherence to ethical guidelines of e-professionalism.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional study delivered as an online voluntary survey to senior medical students at King AbdulAziz University Hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. We investigated how many students used SM, their privacy settings, their possible breaches of ethical standards, and their portrayal of their training institute online.

Results: A total of 400/1546 (26%) senior medical students responded to our survey. Among the participants, 95/400 (24%) had public SM accounts, while 162/400 (41%) had both private and public accounts. As for breaches in e-professionalism, 11/400 (3%) participants posted a picture of a patient on SM without their permission, while 75/400 (20%) posted part of an excised organ or x-ray on SM without their permission, and 60/400 (16%) discussed a patient. With regards to sharing medical school information, 108/400 (29%) discussed an incident at their medical school, and 119/400 (31%) participants shared a lecture online without the presenter's permission. Approximately 66% of the participants reported that they were unaware if their institution had a professional code of conduct for SM use, and 259/371 (70%) did not receive training on the professional use of SM.

Conclusions: Medical students must be taught to recognize inappropriate online behavior, understand their role as representatives of their medical school, and know the potential repercussions of unprofessional conduct on SM. This could be accomplished by providing workshops, regular seminars on e-professionalism, and including principles of SM conduct in existing ethics courses.

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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Education
JMIR Medical Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
审稿时长
8 weeks
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