2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-015-3236-3
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Hospital Evaluations by Social Media: A Comparative Analysis of Facebook Ratings among Performance Outliers

Abstract: BACKGROUND: An increasing number of hospitals and health systems utilize social media to allow users to provide feedback and ratings. The correlation between ratings on social media and more conventional hospital quality metrics remains largely unclear, raising concern that healthcare consumers may make decisions on inaccurate or inappropriate information regarding quality. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine the extent to which hospitals utilize social media and whether user-generated metrics… Show more

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Cited by 79 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…Social media offers hospitals a new way to engage with patients and connect with the community they serve in a potentially powerful and cost-effective way 29 30. Social media may offer hospitals the opportunity to reach more consumers than through traditional commercial or federal reporting websites 18. Hospitals may also use social media to promote public health and increase patient knowledge of health and healthcare: for example, some hospitals maintain specific disease management or patient education programmes, offer information on primary care or provide public service announcements through their Facebook pages 29 31 32.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social media offers hospitals a new way to engage with patients and connect with the community they serve in a potentially powerful and cost-effective way 29 30. Social media may offer hospitals the opportunity to reach more consumers than through traditional commercial or federal reporting websites 18. Hospitals may also use social media to promote public health and increase patient knowledge of health and healthcare: for example, some hospitals maintain specific disease management or patient education programmes, offer information on primary care or provide public service announcements through their Facebook pages 29 31 32.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These differences certainly can skew the results from one study to the next, as we are not examining the same sample across social media platforms or even time periods. Further, the bias in social media adoption may skew the results in favour of finding a relationship; Glover and colleagues12 found that hospitals with Facebook pages had lower readmission rates compared with those without Facebook pages. Thus, the sample used in that study is biased in favour of higher performing providers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars find that traditional hospital quality measures are positively correlated with likes to a hospital’s Facebook pages [89] as well as user ratings on SNSs [90]. Some research studies go even further to examine whether Facebook likes can be used to predict health outcomes such as mortality and diseases [91].…”
Section: Recent Research Themesmentioning
confidence: 99%