“In Canada
in health care we’re at a point where most hospitals accept the role of
social media for branding and communication, but only the lead adopters
are using it for patient engagement and for clinical use.” – Ann Fuller, public relations director, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO)
Call up the website home page for any large Canadian hospital and
you’ll likely spot the familiar icons that link to the institution’s
facebook, Twitter and YouTube accounts.
Hospitals are inherently conservative institutions and, as such, have
been relative latecomers to adopt social media, which are broadly
defined as digital channels that can facilitate timely, collaborative
and interactive communication.
As they enter the social media fray,
hospitals face a host of challenges and decisions. These range from
basic upkeep—nothing is more frustrating to a potential user than a
neglected or stale-dated facebook or Twitter account—to deciding how
interactive to be with patients, and what staff should be trained and
involved in social media use.
From marketing to improved care
Not all hospitals haven entered the
fray—for example, smaller hospitals may not be able to afford the
expertise and time involved in establishing a social media presence—and
among those that have, how they use social media varies significantly.
Many still use the channels for
marketing and old-style public relations communication—for example
posting news releases—while some larger hospitals are more active, have
thousands of followers, and can track and address patient concerns.
But the potential of using social
media to improve patient care and patient experience is only beginning
to be realized, according to health care digital communication leaders.
That’s not surprising because it’s only been a few years since
hospitals began to take social media seriously; the Ontario Hospital
Association hosted its fourth Social Media in Health Care conference just last month; the first was Jan 21, 2010.
Social media policies can allay concerns about risk
The issue of privacy and risk dominated discussions about social
media several years ago, but that concern has begun to be addressed as
hospitals formulate and adopt social media policies (see CHEO policy, for example) that spell out ground rules for use.
An emerging debate contrasts the approach of hospitals that use a
single channel “firehose” social media approach—institutions that have
just one facebook and one Twitter account for all communication—and
those that have multiple social media channels.
To Ed Bennett,
who manages web operations at the University of Maryland Medical
System, the progression from hosting single to multiple speciality
channels—from addressing patient concerns at a broad level, to also
addressing narrower concerns of specific patient groups—is a natural
evolution.
Social media: this is where the public is talking about you
Part of his job is to monitor all online mentions of his medical
centre and decide which ones are appropriate to respond to, and who
should respond. “This is where conversations are moving, where they’re
[the public] is talking about you, and if you don’t participate, you are
cut off from the discussion.”
A lot of concerns are about services such as parking, or long waits
in the ER, or how to get test results, he notes. “If you are able to
resolve these, or just respond in a polite way, you can turn a negative
into a positive.”
Craig Thompson, director of digital communications at Women's College
Hospital in Toronto, says the "low hanging fruit" that social media
can address involves better communication about issues that frequently
frustrate patients, such as hospital access and how to prepare for
procedures. Beyond that, opportunities to use social media to improve
patient experience "present themselves at different times, every
organization has to find its own solutions."
Social media such as facebook also present the opportunity to create
“extensions of real life face-to-face patient support groups,” says
Bennett. The Maryland University Medical System sponsors four or five of
such groups, including for transplant and for trauma patients;
participants have to be invited to join (the groups are closed) and the
groups are moderated by a health care professional.
“Still, we explain that nothing on the Internet is 100% closed and
warn people not to put out any information that wouldn’t be comfortable
with the world seeing,” he says.
The multiple channel approach
Michelle Hamilton-Page is the manager of social media at CAMH
(the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto), which has a
multiple channel model approach to social media (see, for example, its
foundation-associated endstigma facebook page).
Hamilton-Page’s position is based in education, rather than
communications, and she spends much of her time helping groups within CAMH think through whether social media can help them meet their objectives and, if so, how to go about it.
A similar approach is taken at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto,
notes digital media manager Anthony Lucic. “People think of social media
as mass communication, but it can be really focused and targeted.
Sometimes, it’s about just wanting to talk with a core group of peers.
Our approach is very grassroots, we sit down with people to find out who
they want to engage, and what networks they could use.”
Children's Hospitals have been early adopters of social media
Children’s Hospitals, like CHEO in Ottawa and the SickKids (the
Hospital for Sick Children) in Toronto, are among the most advanced in
terms of using social media. That’s partly because the patients, and
their parents, are younger—and members of age cohorts that are
relatively more comfortable using social media.
“Our patients, and their parents, have different expectations”
compared to adult hospitals, says Ann Fuller, public relations director
at CHEO. “New generations are used to sharing more and have different
expectations of privacy than my mother did.”
And Fuller notes some doctors are saying it is time to relook at the
idea that that physicians should not interact through social media with
patients, point to “niche applications” where, for example, a clinician
could be on facebook with a group of young patients with diabetes.
A recent research study at CHEO
into patients’ use of facebook underscored its importance to teenagers
with long-term and chronic illnesses and noted that only a few disclosed
any personal health information on their facebook pages.
It concluded that that the need for social-network-based
communication between patients and healthcare providers—now forbidden by
some institutions—will increase and that “age-appropriate
privacy-awareness education” should be strengthened.
Calls for more education, literacy
Better education about social media is something that Sivan Keren
Young, manager of digital communications at Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre, thinks is essential. “Everyone is using social media, but no one
gets any social media literacy training, there’s nothing in schools,
and that can cause mistakes, people can unintentionally do the wrong
thing.”
Interestingly, it was disappointment about the level of public uptake
for H1N1 vaccination was the inspiration for the first major Canadian
examination of how health care institutions could use social media to
understand and improve the patient experience.
“For us, the light bulb went on” when the Toronto-based Health Strategy Innovation Cell went online to find out what was being said in patient websites and chat rooms about the H1N1 vaccine, says Cathy Fooks, president of The Change Foundation , which co-authored a report on using social media to improve health care and worked with two health care organizations to explore the potential of social media.
What the investigators discovered was a whole series of
anti-vaccination conversations about concerns about the vaccine—concerns
that were inhibiting people from getting vaccination. “Public Health
had no idea—none of that concern had turned up in their formal
communication channels,” Fooks noted.
The foundation went on to co-author with the Innovation Cell a seminal report on using social media to improve health care and a report based on work with two health care organizations exploring the potential of using social media.
According to Bennett, those who are still sceptical about social
media should stop thinking of it as brand new and different: “It’s still
people talking to each other.”
Original Source : http://healthydebate.ca/2013/02/topic/innovation/social-media-in-hospitals
Hospitals begin to recognize social media’s potential to improve patient experience
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