The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review

Background Health-related social media use is common but few health organisations have embraced its potential for engaging stakeholders in service design and quality improvement (QI). Social media may provide new ways to engage more diverse stakeholders and conduct health design and QI activities. O...

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Main Authors: Louisa Walsh (6476492), Nerida Hyett (6716015), Nicole Juniper (10197824), Chi Li (297996), Sophie Rodier (10197827), Sophie Hill (1821397)
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26181/604ec563101e2
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/14188889 2023-05-15T16:16:50+02:00 The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review Louisa Walsh (6476492) Nerida Hyett (6716015) Nicole Juniper (10197824) Chi Li (297996) Sophie Rodier (10197827) Sophie Hill (1821397) 2021-03-15T02:24:33Z https://doi.org/10.26181/604ec563101e2 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_use_of_social_media_as_a_tool_for_stakeholder_engagement_in_health_service_design_and_quality_improvement_A_scoping_review/14188889 doi:10.26181/604ec563101e2 CC BY-NC 4.0 CC-BY-NC Uncategorized Uncategorised value Text Journal contribution 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.26181/604ec563101e2 2021-03-23T16:42:42Z Background Health-related social media use is common but few health organisations have embraced its potential for engaging stakeholders in service design and quality improvement (QI). Social media may provide new ways to engage more diverse stakeholders and conduct health design and QI activities. Objective To map how social media is used by health services, providers and consumers to contribute to service design or QI activities. Methods The scoping review was undertaken using the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. An advisory committee of stakeholders provided guidance throughout the review. Inclusion criteria were studies of any health service stakeholders, in any health setting, where social media was used as a tool for communications which influenced or advocated for changes to health service design or delivery. A descriptive numerical summary of the communication models, user populations and QI activities was created from the included studies, and the findings were further synthesised using deductive qualitative content analysis. Results 40 studies were included. User populations included organisations, clinical and non-clinical providers, young people, people with chronic illness/disability and First Nations people. Twitter was the most common platform for design and QI activities. Most activities were conducted using two-way communication models. A typology of social media use is presented, identifying nine major models of use. Conclusion This review identifies the ways in which social media is being used as a tool to engage stakeholders in health service design and QI, with different models of use appropriate for different activities, user populations and stages of the QI cycle. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper First Nations Unknown Briggs ENVELOPE(-63.017,-63.017,-64.517,-64.517)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
Uncategorised value
spellingShingle Uncategorized
Uncategorised value
Louisa Walsh (6476492)
Nerida Hyett (6716015)
Nicole Juniper (10197824)
Chi Li (297996)
Sophie Rodier (10197827)
Sophie Hill (1821397)
The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
topic_facet Uncategorized
Uncategorised value
description Background Health-related social media use is common but few health organisations have embraced its potential for engaging stakeholders in service design and quality improvement (QI). Social media may provide new ways to engage more diverse stakeholders and conduct health design and QI activities. Objective To map how social media is used by health services, providers and consumers to contribute to service design or QI activities. Methods The scoping review was undertaken using the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. An advisory committee of stakeholders provided guidance throughout the review. Inclusion criteria were studies of any health service stakeholders, in any health setting, where social media was used as a tool for communications which influenced or advocated for changes to health service design or delivery. A descriptive numerical summary of the communication models, user populations and QI activities was created from the included studies, and the findings were further synthesised using deductive qualitative content analysis. Results 40 studies were included. User populations included organisations, clinical and non-clinical providers, young people, people with chronic illness/disability and First Nations people. Twitter was the most common platform for design and QI activities. Most activities were conducted using two-way communication models. A typology of social media use is presented, identifying nine major models of use. Conclusion This review identifies the ways in which social media is being used as a tool to engage stakeholders in health service design and QI, with different models of use appropriate for different activities, user populations and stages of the QI cycle.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Louisa Walsh (6476492)
Nerida Hyett (6716015)
Nicole Juniper (10197824)
Chi Li (297996)
Sophie Rodier (10197827)
Sophie Hill (1821397)
author_facet Louisa Walsh (6476492)
Nerida Hyett (6716015)
Nicole Juniper (10197824)
Chi Li (297996)
Sophie Rodier (10197827)
Sophie Hill (1821397)
author_sort Louisa Walsh (6476492)
title The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
title_short The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
title_full The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
title_fullStr The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
title_full_unstemmed The use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: A scoping review
title_sort use of social media as a tool for stakeholder engagement in health service design and quality improvement: a scoping review
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.26181/604ec563101e2
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.017,-63.017,-64.517,-64.517)
geographic Briggs
geographic_facet Briggs
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_use_of_social_media_as_a_tool_for_stakeholder_engagement_in_health_service_design_and_quality_improvement_A_scoping_review/14188889
doi:10.26181/604ec563101e2
op_rights CC BY-NC 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26181/604ec563101e2
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