Media Impact On Social Media

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Social media has impacted our culture over the last 40 years. It has become a significant part of communication. Social media is any use of electronic applications to create and voice opinions or content through social tools on the web. Social media became a great and easier way to connect with people using the internet. Health care providers started to use social media sites to promote wellness, spread healthcare news, and help patients. But when is social media taken too far? Nurses use social media sites such as blogging, Twitter, and Facebook all the time, but there is a broad line between professional and personal online etiquette (Nurse Without Borders, n.d.). Health care employees sign a contract to protect patient confidentiality and …show more content…

Health care is becoming more interconnected with social media. The internet has become the primary source for most patients. If one gets sick or develops symptoms, they are able to search the internet with those symptoms and get some sort of a treatment. People search everything on the internet; nearby doctors, surgical procedures, medications and their effects, etcetera. People are able to share different information about health care such as reviews on hospitals, doctors, urgent care facilities, share their experiences with illnesses and what treatment worked best. Individuals can also use social media to ask for advice or search for information on the go. This is an important part of social media because some people may not have enough time to go to the doctors office. This impacts both consumers and health care in general. Social media impacts health care providers by raising awareness about nursing and advocating for nurses. “There are many negative images of nursing in the media, from highly sexualized portrayals of nurses to depiction of healthcare systems where nurses are invisible” (Jackson & Mitchell, 2015). The Ottawa Hospital created live nursing tweets called “The Day in the Life” project that helps represent nursing lives. The tweets include a real day in a nurses work day, chronicles of their critical thinking and how they solve problems, compassion, and nursing skills (Jackson & Mitchell,

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