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You are here: Home / Articles / The Role of Social Media in a Rheumatology Practice

The Role of Social Media in a Rheumatology Practice

September 5, 2012 • By Daniel F. Battafarano, DO, FACP, FACR

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Dr. Battafarano
Dr. Battafarano

Clinicians often fear social media and perceive it to be only Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. However, according to Wikipedia, social media includes any web-based or mobile technology “which are used to turn communication into interactive dialogue,” which can enhance communication and interaction with our patients and our provider network. Social media presents an opportunity to enhance the visibility of your practice, connect clinical staff with patients, and to create a network outside the walls of your clinic. This is essential for a hospital-based practice and even possible for an individual practitioner.

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September 2012

The financial industry, businesses, and many service markets use social media to connect with customers on a routine basis. Our patients and colleagues of all ages expect to connect with our practice through social media. Did you know that 50% of the world’s population is under the age of 30, or that women over the age of 55 have become the largest group of new social media users? Our patients anticipate discovering our clinical practices or individual providers using social media. Social media tools are a means of public relations for a rheumatology practice, and they expose the rheumatology profession to the wider public. Examples of web-based enhancements for your practice may include:

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  1. Interactive technology to build trust and a positive reputation with patients by introducing them to clinic policies, advertise services, and highlight staff member profiles.
  2. Routine demographic and billing forms for the clinic that can be downloaded by patients prior to their first appointments.
  3. Web-based education for rheumatic diseases and medications and providing links to the ACR and other reputable sites that enable patient education and decrease telephone calls.
  4. Virtual connections between patients, rheumatology providers, and other rheumatology specialists in occupational therapy, physical therapy, pharmacy, nurse educators, psychology, and social workers supporting a holistic approach to rheumatology care.
  5. YouTube videos for interviews, education, and reviewing procedures with patients.

Sharing health information on Facebook or Twitter is a safe practice for strictly educational purposes. However, providing specific patient recommendations using social media can be risky to the provider, the practice, and the hospital.

A website is practical in most clinical settings. It is critical to establish policies surrounding patient privacy and professional boundaries. Sharing health information on Facebook or Twitter is a safe practice for strictly educational purposes. However, providing specific patient recommendations using social media can be risky to the provider, the practice, and the hospital. Therefore, many practices have established policies to not answer specific patient questions via social media or e-mail. If a patient contacts you via Facebook or Twitter, it is recommended that the dialog be taken off line and clearly documented in the medical record. Facebook and Twitter links have become common at large medical centers, but often are managed by media and public relations professionals, not by practitioners.

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Pages: 1 2 | Single Page

Filed Under: Apps, From the College, Practice Management, Quality Assurance/Improvement, Technology Tagged With: Education, patient care, patient communication, Practice Management, rheumatologist, Social Media, TechnologyIssue: September 2012

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  • How A Social Media Policy Can Protect Your Practice
  • How the Mayo Clinic Maximizes Learning Opportunities Through Social Media
  • The ACR’s Social Media Boot Camp Won’t Make You Sweat
  • Social Media 101 for Rheumatologists & Health Professionals

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