Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study

BackgroundThe use of social media by hospitals has become widespread in the United States and Western European countries. However, in Japan, the extent to which hospitals and clinics use social media is unknown. Furthermore, recent revisions to the Medical Care Act may subjec...

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Main Authors: Sugawara, Yuya, Murakami, Masayasu, Narimatsu, Hiroto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-11-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:https://medinform.jmir.org/2020/11/e18666
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spelling doaj-8785201f7d7a49589a33b8de02230cfd2021-05-02T19:28:50ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942020-11-01811e1866610.2196/18666Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive StudySugawara, YuyaMurakami, MasayasuNarimatsu, Hiroto BackgroundThe use of social media by hospitals has become widespread in the United States and Western European countries. However, in Japan, the extent to which hospitals and clinics use social media is unknown. Furthermore, recent revisions to the Medical Care Act may subject social media content to regulation. ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to examine social media use in Japanese hospitals and clinics. We investigated the adoption of social media, analyzed social media content, and compared content with medical advertising guidelines. MethodsWe randomly sampled 300 hospitals and 300 clinics from a list of medical institutions that was compiled by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. We performed web and social media (Facebook and Twitter) searches using the hospital and clinic names to determine whether they had social media accounts. We collected Facebook posts and Twitter tweets and categorized them based on their content (eg, health promotion, participation in academic meetings and publications, public relations or news announcements, and recruitment). We compared the collected content with medical advertising guidelines. ResultsWe found that 26.0% (78/300) of the hospitals and 7.7% (23/300) of the clinics used Facebook, Twitter, or both. Public relations or news announcements accounted for 53.99% (724/1341) of the Facebook posts by hospitals and 58.4% (122/209) of the Facebook posts by clinics. In hospitals, 16/1341 (1.19%) Facebook posts and 6/574 (1.0%) tweets and in clinics, 8/209 (3.8%) Facebook posts and 15/330 (4.5%) tweets could conflict medical advertising guidelines. ConclusionsFewer hospitals and clinics in Japan use social media as compared to other countries. Social media were mainly used for public relations. Some content disseminated by medical institutions could conflict with medical advertising guidelines. This study may serve as a reference for medical institutions to guide social media usage and may help improve medical website advertising in Japan.https://medinform.jmir.org/2020/11/e18666
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sugawara, Yuya
Murakami, Masayasu
Narimatsu, Hiroto
spellingShingle Sugawara, Yuya
Murakami, Masayasu
Narimatsu, Hiroto
Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
JMIR Medical Informatics
author_facet Sugawara, Yuya
Murakami, Masayasu
Narimatsu, Hiroto
author_sort Sugawara, Yuya
title Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
title_short Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
title_full Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
title_fullStr Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
title_full_unstemmed Use of Social Media by Hospitals and Clinics in Japan: Descriptive Study
title_sort use of social media by hospitals and clinics in japan: descriptive study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Informatics
issn 2291-9694
publishDate 2020-11-01
description BackgroundThe use of social media by hospitals has become widespread in the United States and Western European countries. However, in Japan, the extent to which hospitals and clinics use social media is unknown. Furthermore, recent revisions to the Medical Care Act may subject social media content to regulation. ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to examine social media use in Japanese hospitals and clinics. We investigated the adoption of social media, analyzed social media content, and compared content with medical advertising guidelines. MethodsWe randomly sampled 300 hospitals and 300 clinics from a list of medical institutions that was compiled by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. We performed web and social media (Facebook and Twitter) searches using the hospital and clinic names to determine whether they had social media accounts. We collected Facebook posts and Twitter tweets and categorized them based on their content (eg, health promotion, participation in academic meetings and publications, public relations or news announcements, and recruitment). We compared the collected content with medical advertising guidelines. ResultsWe found that 26.0% (78/300) of the hospitals and 7.7% (23/300) of the clinics used Facebook, Twitter, or both. Public relations or news announcements accounted for 53.99% (724/1341) of the Facebook posts by hospitals and 58.4% (122/209) of the Facebook posts by clinics. In hospitals, 16/1341 (1.19%) Facebook posts and 6/574 (1.0%) tweets and in clinics, 8/209 (3.8%) Facebook posts and 15/330 (4.5%) tweets could conflict medical advertising guidelines. ConclusionsFewer hospitals and clinics in Japan use social media as compared to other countries. Social media were mainly used for public relations. Some content disseminated by medical institutions could conflict with medical advertising guidelines. This study may serve as a reference for medical institutions to guide social media usage and may help improve medical website advertising in Japan.
url https://medinform.jmir.org/2020/11/e18666
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