The Experiences of Stakeholders Using Social Media as a Tool for Health Service Design and Quality Improvement: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Stakeholder Involvement in This Scoping Review
- Deciding upon the research question;
- Finding articles for screening;
- Assisting with data analysis, including making suggestions to refine and re-group codes and themes;
- Reviewing the manuscript; and
- Shaping the content of the discussion section through prioritising the analysis findings based on their own experience of the health system.
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.2.1. Population
- Users or potential users of a health service (i.e., patients, consumer representatives, consumers with an acute or chronic condition, carers, family members, consumer organization member, community members, general public); and/or
- Health service providers (health professionals, health service manager/administrator, health policy makers).
2.2.2. Concept
- Studies where social media was used as a tool within design or QI activities which were initiated by health organisations, and
- Studies where social media was used as a tool by stakeholders to influence or advocate for changes to the design or delivery of health services, systems or policy.
2.2.3. Context
2.2.4. Study Design
2.3. Search Strategy
2.4. Screening of Studies and Extraction of the Results
2.5. Synthesis of Results
2.6. Variation in Method from the Published Protocol
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Qualitative Content Analysis
3.3. Benefits
3.3.1. Improves Organisational Communication
3.3.2. Builds Relationships
3.3.3. High Quality Information
3.3.4. Improves Organisational Culture and Reputation
3.4. Risks and Limitations
3.4.1. Limited or Ineffective Engagement
3.4.2. Limited Evidence of Effectiveness
3.4.3. Direct Harm to Individuals and Organisations
3.4.4. Challenges to Strategic Use
3.5. Barriers
3.5.1. Lack of Access to and Familiarity with Social Media
3.5.2. Lack of Organisational Processes and Support
3.5.3. Concerns about How People Behave Online
3.5.4. Problems with Social Media Platforms
3.6. Enablers
3.6.1. Facilitating Access and Use for All Stakeholders
3.6.2. Making Discussions Safe
3.6.3. Providing High Quality Content and User Incentives
3.6.4. Building a Social Media Community
4. Discussion
4.1. The Importance of Engaging New Audiences and Overcoming Underutilisation
4.2. Managing Negative, False or Malicious Messaging
4.3. Building Relationships
Anonymity
4.4. What This Review Adds to the Literature
4.5. Gaps in the Literature
4.6. Limitations
4.7. Implications for Practice
4.8. Implications for Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses |
PRISMA-ScR | PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews |
QI | Quality improvement |
UK | United Kingdom |
USA | United States of America |
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Population |
|
Concept |
|
Context |
|
First Author (Year) | Study Aim | Social Media Platform(s) | Study Design + Participants | Region or Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
Al Fannah (2022) [37] | To share the experience of QI teams during the COVID-19 pandemic | Mixed; case study Multiple Agile Teams of 6–12 members each | Oman | |
Ali (2022) [38] | To evaluate a QI project to implement an intervention to assist so doctors to source the one ECG machine on a ward. | Mixed; case study 12 junior doctors | England, UK | |
Amann (2017) [39] | To explore the views and experiences of online disability community managers in relation to knowledge co-creation | Forums (unspecified)—registration required (two communities); no registration required (two communities) | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews 9 interview participants | Unspecified |
Bahk (2015) [40] | To assess the potential for participatory epidemiology in post-marketing medical device surveillance through engagement with an online patient community | Facebook group, MedWatcher website | Mixed; analysis of posts on Facebook group and MedWatcher website 17,850 Facebook group members; 1354 user submissions on MedWatcher website | USA |
Booth (2017) [41] | To explore the experiences and evidence around the use of social media in Ontario public health | Unspecified social media | Qualitative; group deliberation activities and nominal group technique activity 50 participants in the group activities | Canada |
Bridge (2021) [42] | To explore the #SugarTax debate on Twitter during the implementation of the UK Soft Drink Industry Levy. | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; social network analysis and thematic analysis of tweets 5366 tweets | UK |
Deerhake (2020) [43] | To evaluate the impact a social media–based community of practice had on a post-merger intensive care unit work environment. | Facebook—closed group | Mixed methods; pre-post implementation survey, social media analytics and content analysis 14 participants in the community of practice | USA |
Dennis (2022) [44] | To examine attitudes towards a twice-weekly mass asymptomatic COVID-19 testing policy | Twitter, Facebook, comments sections from national newspapers. | Qualitative analysis of social media posts. 5783 comments: 485 comments from Twitter; 3776 comments from Facebook; 1522 comments from newspaper articles | England, UK |
De Sousa (2018) [45] | To evaluate a social media-based QI project around the knowledge of best practices in hypoglycaemia management for nurses | Facebook—Public organisational page Instagram—Public organisational page | Quantitative; social media analytics and knowledge survey 101 pre-intervention survey participants 60 post-intervention survey participants | Canada |
Doan (2022) [46] | To examine Twitter posts to investigate how users engaged in activism in response to the passage of Georgia’s abortion ban. | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Qualitative analysis of 583 tweets | USA |
Dobbs (2022) [47] | To explore Twitter discussions about the federal Tobacco 21 law in the USA in the period leading up to the law being enacted | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Qualitative analysis of 1300 tweets | USA |
Gonzalez-Aguero (2022) [48] | To explore a social movement which called for the inclusion of the insulin pump into a universal health cover plan | Various | Qualitative; Semi-structured interviews with nine people involved in the campaign | Chile |
Greaves (2014) [49] | To examine and compare tweets sent to hospitals with established measures of quality of care and patient experience | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; volume and frequency of total tweets in study period, and content analysis Content analysis of 1000 tweets | UK |
Harris (2014) [50] | To evaluate the implementation of a online food poisoning surveillance, reporting and management system in Chicago | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Quantitative; Twitter and website analytics, outcomes of food safety inspections of restaurants 270 tweets, 193 website complaints, 133 restaurant inspections | USA |
Harris (2017) [51], Harris (2018) [52] | To evaluate the implementation of a online food poisoning surveillance, reporting and management system in St Louis | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; Twitter and website analytics, outcomes of food safety inspections of restaurants (2017); interviews with stakeholders (2018) 193 tweets, 7 interview participants | USA |
Harris and Moreland-Russell (2014) [53] | To examine the social media response to the Chicago Department of Health e-cigarette campaign | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; Twitter analytics and content analysis of tweets 683 tweets | USA |
Hatchard (2019) [54] | To examine how the volume, sentiment and purpose of tweets about standardised packaging of tobacco changed following the announcement of a parliamentary vote on the policy | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; content analysis and descriptive statistics with comparison between findings at two time-points 1038 tweets | UK |
Hawkins (2016) [55] | To assess the use of Twitter posts related to patient experience and sentiment as an additional source of data for measuring perceived quality of care in hospitals | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; machine learning classification of identified tweets, calculation of sentiment, surveys of representatives from included hospitals 404,065 tweets, 147 survey participants | USA |
Hays (2015) [56] | To identify and describe the range of opinions expressed about care.data on Twitter for the period during which a delay to the project was announced, and provide insight into the strengths and flaws of the project. | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Qualitative analysis of 3537 tweets from 904 contributors | UK |
He (2020) [57] | To report on the outcomes of #GetMePPE, which used digital tools (including social media) to advocate for the provision of PPE to hospital workers during the COVID-19 pandemic | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; case study >1800 hospitals and PPE suppliers entered in database and >10,000 signatures on petition associated with campaign | USA |
Hedge (2011) [58] | To explore the effectiveness and challenges of a social media-based youth sexual health service evaluation project | Facebook; MySpace; Bebo; Hi5—all public organisational pages | Quantitative; survey 78 survey participants | UK |
Hildebrand (2013) [59] | To describe the participatory methods used to involve young people in the UNAIDS strategy planning. | Facebook; Blog; RenRen; Vkontake; forums on purpose-built website—all public organisational pages or open forums | Qualitative; thematic analysis of online and offline forum discussions 3479 participants across all activities | Regional forums for Africa, Latin America, Brazil, Asia Pacific, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Middle East, North America, Caribbean, Central Europe, China. |
Jun (2022) [60] | To identify the Twitter users who engaged in conversations about the Food and Drug Administration’s Modified Risk Tobacco Product Authorisation of the IQOS tobacco heating system related conversations and characterise their tweets | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed; qualitative analysis of tweets, descriptive statistics and use of machine learning 548 tweets | USA |
Kearns (2021) [61] | To assess how California dentists use social media to engage in discussions about sugar restriction policies | Unspecified social media | Quantitative; survey 624 survey participants | USA |
Khasnavis (2017) [62] | To assess public response to lung cancer guidelines through Twitter | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; Twitter analytics, content and sentiment analysis 172 included tweets | USA |
King (2013) [63] | To examine how Twitter users influenced or informed opinions on the Health and Social Care Bill in the UK | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; Twitter analytics, sentiment analysis 120,180 included tweets, 200 tweets included in sentiment analysis | UK |
Kirkpatrick (2021) [64] | To document the Twitter conversation pertaining to the proposal or implementation of policies restricting the availability of flavoured e-cigarette products | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Qualitative analysis of 2500 tweets from 536 users | USA |
Kleefstra (2016) [65] | To explore how review on hospital rating sites can inform the supervision of hospitals by healthcare inspectors | Hospital rate and review site—public site | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews 10 interview participants | The Netherlands |
Lagu (2016) [66] | To understand how Facebook could be used to engage patients in hospital quality improvement | Facebook—public organisational page | Qualitative; thematic coding of Facebook posts 47 posts from 37 respondents | USA |
Lara (2017) [67] | To evaluate the implementation of two virtual communities of practice | Purpose-built platform—registration required | Mixed methods; site analytics, survey, case study 66 participants in pilot phase, 181 participants post-launch | Spain |
Levine (2011) [68] | To describe the process of using social media to involve young people in the development of an internet-based intervention | MySpace—registration required forum and chat functions | Qualitative; online focus groups 36 focus group participants | USA |
Li (2019) [69] | To describe the process of using social media to improve the integration of HIV services for people who inject drugs through the development of a virtual network of antiretroviral therapy and methadone maintenance treatment providers | Facebook—private groups | Qualitative; content analysis of posts 88 treatment provider participants | Vietnam |
Litchman (2020) [70] | To examine the Do-It-Yourself patient-led innovation movement through analysis of tweets from #WeAreNotWaiting and #OpenAPS tweets | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; analysis of 46,578 tweets from 7886 participants | International (Tweets for 142 countries) |
Mazanderani (2021) [71] | To explore the views of healthcare service users about the relationship between online feedback and care improvement | Unspecified social media | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews 37 interview participants | UK |
Moorley (2014) [72] | To evaluate the use of Twitter to create an online nursing community | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Quantitative; Twitter analytics 7000 Twitter followers | UK |
Norman (2012) [73] | To present the ways in which young people have been engaged in research and evaluation through the use of social media and digital tools | Facebook; Twitter; Ning; Flickr; purpose-built platform—mix of restricted access groups and public pages | Mixed methods; two case studies Total number of participants not stated | Canada |
O’Connor (2017) [74] | To examine social media as a tool to engage nurses in priority setting and policy communication and development | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; Twitter analytics and thematic analysis 64 participants, 444 tweets | Scotland, UK |
Olszowski (2022) [75] | To conduct analysis of Twitter discussions around the introduction of mandatory vaccinations for COVID-19 in Poland | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods analysis of 71,908 tweets from 21,779 users | Poland |
Owolabi (2014) [76] | To explore stakeholder views around the integration of Traditional Birth Attendants into formal health systems | Email moderated forum—registration required | Qualitative; thematic analysis 193 forum participants, 658 messages | Africa, North and South America, Europe |
Pisano (2014) [77] | To use social media to increase medical residents’ awareness of antimicrobial stewardship tool and care pathways | Facebook; Twitter—public organisational pages and feeds | Quantitative; pre- and post-intervention survey 39 survey participants | USA |
Porterfield (2017) [78] | To evaluate an online QI communication platform for public health professionals | Purpose-built platform—registration required | Mixed methods; survey, interviews and platform analytics 462 survey participants, 21 interview participants | USA |
Ramirez (2015) [79] | To evaluate the impact of an online network on health policy advocacy | Facebook; Twitter; Blog; YouTube—all public organisational pages | Quantitative; survey 148 survey participants | USA |
Ramirez (2021) [80] | To understand how tweetchats are used to promote dissemination of culturally relevant information on social determinants of health | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; social media and website analytics, network analysis 187 chats with 24,609 users, 177,466 tweets | USA |
Rasheed (2021) [81]; Rasheed (2022) [82] | To describe the design, implementation, and evaluation of a social media-based communication and leadership development strategy in a tertiary care hospital in Pakistan | Facebook—closed group | Mixed methods; case study and evaluation (social media analytics and content analysis of posts) 9085 Facebook posts, 625 members | Pakistan |
Robin (2022) [83] | To use social media sources to evaluate the acceptance of COVID-19 asymptomatic testing policy in Liverpool | Twitter, Facebook, online newspaper comment section—public posts and feeds | Qualitative analysis of 1096 posts and comments (219 newspaper comments, 472 Facebook comments, and 405 tweets) | England |
Shan (2015) [84] | To examine the use and impact of social media on communication between consumers and public food safety and nutrition organisations. | Various—including Facebook, Twitter, Youtube; public posts and feeds | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews with 16 professionals from five national food safety and nutrition organisations | UK and Ireland |
Shields (2010) [85] | To describe the use of social media to conduct a healthcare priority setting activity | Facebook; Blog, YouTube, Choicebook; forum (unspecified)—access features undescribed | Mixed methods; platform analytics, thematic analysis of written contributions >800 people | Canada |
Shimkhada (2021) [86] | To use Twitter to set priorities and policy recommendations to improve metastatic breast cancer care | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed methods; social media analytics and content analysis 288 Tweets from 42 users | USA |
Sivananthan (2021) [87] | To evaluate a communication network between junior doctors and senior leadership established during the COVID-19 pandemic | WhatsApp—access restricted to invited users | Mixed methods; case study and evaluation (social media analytics and content analysis of posts) 780 members of the WhatsApp group | UK |
Smith-Frigerio (2020) [88] | To explore how two grassroots mental health groups incorporate advocacy strategies into their social media messages, and how these messages are received by audiences | Facebook, Twitter—access features undescribed | Mixed; content analysis of social media posts and semi-structured interviews 20 interview participants, 200 social media posts | USA |
Sperber (2016) [89] | To identify the characteristics of an online health community that may inform and support patient-centred healthcare | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Qualitative; ethnography of Twitter content and semi-structured interviews 22 interview participants | Global, most activity from USA and Europe |
Sun (2021) [90] | To explore the Twitter reactions to Australian government plans to prohibit the personal importation of nicotine vaping products | Twitter—public posts and feeds | Mixed; qualitative coding and descriptive statistics from 1168 tweets | Australia |
Sundstrom (2016) [91] | To examine the role that sharing health experiences can play in an online advocacy community | Tumblr—public posts | Qualitative; content analysis of blog posts 1110 posts included in analysis | USA |
Timimi (2015) [92] | To explore the use of a social media platform to foster cultural change and improve patient experience | Purpose-built platform—registration required | Mixed methods; surveys of knowledge and awareness, platform analytics, thematic analysis of forum posts 254 participants in pilot social media platform | USA |
Vasilica (2020) [93] | To determine whether a social media hub for people with chronic kidney disease, which had been co-designed with patients, met patients’ information needs and improved health and social outcomes. | Privately developed platform, Facebook; Twitter—mix of registration required platform, closed Facebook groups, and public Twitter posts and feeds | Mixed methods; co-design and longitudinal evaluation (which included observations on use of the platform, survey and interviews) 15 users were involved in co-design activity; 50 at launch event, 14 in longitudinal study | UK |
Waddell (2019) [94] | To describe and analyse social media content from USA nursing organisations in the lead-up to the 2016 presidential election | Facebook; Twitter—public organisational pages and feeds | Qualitative; content analysis of social media posts 2137 posts analysed | USA |
Weiler (2013) [95] | To describe the use of a social media strategy to increase feedback to a local draft health and wellbeing strategy | Blog, online poll, Twitter | Mixed methods; case study of 126 poll votes and 3373 engagement responses to the strategy | England |
Wu (2019) [96] | To evaluate the acceptability of, and gather feedback on, a gay-friendly health services platform | Mixed methods; survey and focus groups with 34 participants | China | |
Zakkar (2022) [97] | To explore healthcare provider and administrator perspectives on patient stories on social media | Various platforms which allow sharing of patient stories | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews with 21 healthcare providers and administrators | Canada |
A Priori Themes | Sub-Themes | Codes |
---|---|---|
Benefits | Improves organisational communication |
|
Build relationships |
| |
Higher quality information |
| |
Improves organisational culture and reputation |
| |
Risks/Limitations | Limited or ineffective engagement |
|
Limited evidence of effectiveness |
| |
Direct harm to individuals and organisations |
| |
Challenges to strategic use |
| |
Barriers | Lack of access to and familiarity with social media |
|
Lack of organisational processes and support |
| |
Concerns about how people behave online |
| |
Problems with social media platforms |
| |
Enablers | Facilitating access and use for all stakeholders |
|
Making discussions safe |
| |
Providing high quality content and incentives |
| |
Building a social media community |
|
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Share and Cite
Walsh, L.; Hyett, N.; Juniper, N.; Li, C.; Hill, S. The Experiences of Stakeholders Using Social Media as a Tool for Health Service Design and Quality Improvement: A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 14851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214851
Walsh L, Hyett N, Juniper N, Li C, Hill S. The Experiences of Stakeholders Using Social Media as a Tool for Health Service Design and Quality Improvement: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(22):14851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214851
Chicago/Turabian StyleWalsh, Louisa, Nerida Hyett, Nicole Juniper, Chi Li, and Sophie Hill. 2022. "The Experiences of Stakeholders Using Social Media as a Tool for Health Service Design and Quality Improvement: A Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 22: 14851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214851
APA StyleWalsh, L., Hyett, N., Juniper, N., Li, C., & Hill, S. (2022). The Experiences of Stakeholders Using Social Media as a Tool for Health Service Design and Quality Improvement: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(22), 14851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214851