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Managing Medical Knowledge Flow: Physicians’ Social Media Actualisation Practices

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Managing Medical Knowledge Flow: Physicians’ Social Media Actualisation Practices. / Lee, Joyce Yi Hui; Panteli, Niki; Lin, Jessy.
In: Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 365, 117534, 31.01.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Lee JYH, Panteli N, Lin J. Managing Medical Knowledge Flow: Physicians’ Social Media Actualisation Practices. Social Science and Medicine. 2025 Jan 31;365:117534. Epub 2024 Dec 5. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117534

Author

Lee, Joyce Yi Hui ; Panteli, Niki ; Lin, Jessy. / Managing Medical Knowledge Flow : Physicians’ Social Media Actualisation Practices. In: Social Science and Medicine. 2025 ; Vol. 365.

Bibtex

@article{dd1aff6030734b3ca580ff42c4ac29e1,
title = "Managing Medical Knowledge Flow: Physicians{\textquoteright} Social Media Actualisation Practices",
abstract = "Physicians have extensive clinical knowledge and are thus uniquely positioned to offer public health education through social media (SM) platforms. However, it may be challenging for them to effectively communicate complex medical information to lay people with varying levels of related knowledge. There is limited research on how physicians navigate these challenges. This study uses affordance actualisation theory to investigate how a prominent physician adapts SM features to effectively disseminate medical and scientific information. The study identifies two key SM actualisation practices in this process. First, the process involves balancing knowledge brevity to improve accessibility while maintaining information fidelity to ensure accuracy. Second, the process involves providing valuable clinical insights while adhering to legal constraints in the open SM environment through the optimisation of SM features as a compensatory mechanism. The current findings contribute to a theoretical framework on how physicians manage medical knowledge flow online, which involves not only advancing knowledge but also carefully regulating knowledge to maintain accuracy and professional standards within the open nature of SM.",
author = "Lee, {Joyce Yi Hui} and Niki Panteli and Jessy Lin",
year = "2025",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117534",
language = "English",
volume = "365",
journal = "Social Science and Medicine",
issn = "0277-9536",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Managing Medical Knowledge Flow

T2 - Physicians’ Social Media Actualisation Practices

AU - Lee, Joyce Yi Hui

AU - Panteli, Niki

AU - Lin, Jessy

PY - 2025/1/31

Y1 - 2025/1/31

N2 - Physicians have extensive clinical knowledge and are thus uniquely positioned to offer public health education through social media (SM) platforms. However, it may be challenging for them to effectively communicate complex medical information to lay people with varying levels of related knowledge. There is limited research on how physicians navigate these challenges. This study uses affordance actualisation theory to investigate how a prominent physician adapts SM features to effectively disseminate medical and scientific information. The study identifies two key SM actualisation practices in this process. First, the process involves balancing knowledge brevity to improve accessibility while maintaining information fidelity to ensure accuracy. Second, the process involves providing valuable clinical insights while adhering to legal constraints in the open SM environment through the optimisation of SM features as a compensatory mechanism. The current findings contribute to a theoretical framework on how physicians manage medical knowledge flow online, which involves not only advancing knowledge but also carefully regulating knowledge to maintain accuracy and professional standards within the open nature of SM.

AB - Physicians have extensive clinical knowledge and are thus uniquely positioned to offer public health education through social media (SM) platforms. However, it may be challenging for them to effectively communicate complex medical information to lay people with varying levels of related knowledge. There is limited research on how physicians navigate these challenges. This study uses affordance actualisation theory to investigate how a prominent physician adapts SM features to effectively disseminate medical and scientific information. The study identifies two key SM actualisation practices in this process. First, the process involves balancing knowledge brevity to improve accessibility while maintaining information fidelity to ensure accuracy. Second, the process involves providing valuable clinical insights while adhering to legal constraints in the open SM environment through the optimisation of SM features as a compensatory mechanism. The current findings contribute to a theoretical framework on how physicians manage medical knowledge flow online, which involves not only advancing knowledge but also carefully regulating knowledge to maintain accuracy and professional standards within the open nature of SM.

U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117534

DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117534

M3 - Journal article

VL - 365

JO - Social Science and Medicine

JF - Social Science and Medicine

SN - 0277-9536

M1 - 117534

ER -