Literature DB >> 23427284

The social media: its impact on a vascular surgery practice.

William D Turnipseed1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Social media has revolutionized interpersonal communication and has become a commonly used public informational resource. This study evaluates the impact of intranet informatics on a specialty practice of vascular surgery.
METHODS: Referral patterns for patients with chronic compartment syndrome (CCS) and popliteal entrapment syndrome (PAES) between 2008 and 2011 were analyzed. Demographics included referral source (physicians, nonphysicians), media resource, and case volume change.
RESULTS: Prior to 2008, referrals came from local or regional sports medicine practices (100%). Since 2008 this pattern has changed; local/regional (80%), national (15%), and international (5%). Physician referrals dropped from 97% to 70%, and nonphysician referrals increased from 3% to 30%. Both CCS procedures and PAES procedures increased as remote geographic and public referrals increased. Referral change was associated with social media searches using applications such as PubMed and Google.
CONCLUSION: Social media is an evolving source of medical information and patient referrals which physicians should cautiously embrace.

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Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23427284     DOI: 10.1177/1538574413478471

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vasc Endovascular Surg        ISSN: 1538-5744            Impact factor:   1.089


  4 in total

1.  Prevalence of internet and social media usage in orthopedic surgery.

Authors:  Emily Curry; Xinning Li; Joseph Nguyen; Elizabeth Matzkin
Journal:  Orthop Rev (Pavia)       Date:  2014-08-13

2.  Association of Social Media Presence with Online Physician Ratings and Surgical Volume Among California Urologists: Observational Study.

Authors:  Justin Houman; James Weinberger; Ashley Caron; Alex Hannemann; Michael Zaliznyak; Devin Patel; Ariel Moradzadeh; Timothy J Daskivich
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2019-08-13       Impact factor: 5.428

3.  Social Media in Hip Arthroscopy Is an Underused Resource That Enhances Physician Online Reputation.

Authors:  Alexander J Hodakowski; Johnathon R McCormick; Manan S Patel; Caleb Pang; Daehan Yi; Parker M Rea; Allison K Perry; Shane J Nho; Jorge Chahla
Journal:  Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil       Date:  2021-12-30

4.  Vascular e-Learning During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The EL-COVID Survey.

Authors:  Nikolaos Patelis; Theodosios Bisdas; Zaiping Jing; Jiaxuan Feng; Matthias Trenner; Nyityasmono Tri Nugroho; Paulo Eduardo Ocke Reis; Stephane Elkouri; Alexandre Lecis; Lamisse Karam; Dirk Le Roux; Mihai Ionac; Marton Berczeli; Vincent Jongkind; Kak Khee Yeung; Athanasios Katsargyris; Efthymios Avgerinos; Demetrios Moris; Andrew Choong; Jun Jie Ng; Ivan Cvjetko; George A Antoniou; Phil Ghibu; Alexei Svetlikov; Fernando Gallardo Pedrajas; Harm Ebben; Hubert Stepak; Andrii Chornuy; Sviatoslav Kostiv; Stefano Ancetti; Niki Tadayon; Akli Mekkar; Leonid Magnitskiy; Liliana Fidalgo-Domingos; Sean Matheiken; Eduardo Sebastian Sarutte Rosello; Arda Isik; Georgios Kirkilesis; Kyriaki Kakavia; Sotirios Georgopoulos
Journal:  Ann Vasc Surg       Date:  2021-09-01       Impact factor: 1.466

  4 in total

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