PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Characterizing the social media footprint of general surgery residency programs.

  • Erin M White,
  • Stefanie C Rohde,
  • Nensi M Ruzgar,
  • Shin Mei Chan,
  • Andrew C Esposito,
  • Kristin D Oliveira,
  • Peter S Yoo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253787
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0253787

Abstract

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BackgroundThe medical community has increasingly embraced social media for a variety of purposes, including trainee education, research dissemination, professional networking, and recruitment of trainees and faculty. Platform choice and usage patterns appear to vary by specialty and purpose, but few studies comprehensively assess programs' social media presence. Prior studies assessed general surgery departments' Twitter use but omitted additional social media platforms and residency-specific accounts.ObjectiveThis study sought to broadly characterize the social media footprint of U.S. general surgery residency programs.MethodsUsing a protocolized search of program websites, social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn), and internet search, cross-sectional data on social media usage in March 2020 were collected for programs, their affiliated departments, their program directors (PDs), and their assistant/associate PDs (APDs).Results318 general surgery residency programs, 313 PDs, and 296 APDs were identified. 47.2% of programs had surgery-specific accounts on ≥1 platform. 40.2% of PDs and APDs had ≥1 account on Twitter and/or LinkedIn. Program type was associated with social media adoption and Twitter utilization, with lower usage among university-affiliated and independent programs (pConclusionsMost general surgery residencies, especially non-university-based programs, lacked any department or residency accounts across Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram by March 2020. These findings highlight opportunities for increased social media engagement and act as a pre-pandemic baseline for future investigations of how the shift to virtual trainee education, recruitment, conferences, and clinical care affect social media use.