@文章{信息:doi/10.2196/11193,作者=“Tougas, Michelle E和Chambers, Christine T和Corkum, Penny和Robillard, Julie M和Gruzd, Anatoliy和Howard, Vivian和Kampen, Andrea和Boerner, Katelynn E和Hundert, Amos S”,标题=“关于儿童疼痛和睡眠的社交媒体内容:内容和网络分析”,期刊=“JMIR儿科父母”,年=“2018”,月=“12月”,日=“11”,卷=“1”,数=“2”,页=“e11193”,关键词=“儿童健康;知识的翻译;疼痛;睡眠;背景:社交媒体经常用于健康传播,可以促进快速的信息交换。尽管社交媒体的使用越来越多,但人们对儿童健康信息在社交媒体上的分享和参与知之甚少。目的:本研究的主要目标是系统地描述社交媒体上关于儿童疼痛和睡眠的帖子的内容,并确定这些帖子中的研究证据水平。第二个目标是研究用户对通过社交媒体分享的信息的参与度。方法:研究团队成员使用综合搜索策略在两周内搜索Twitter、Instagram和Facebook。使用代码对帖子的内容进行分类,以识别在社交媒体平台上分享的内容类别的频率。 Posts were evaluated by content experts to determine the frequency of posts consistent with existing research evidence. User engagement was analyzed using Netlytic, a social network analysis program, to examine visual networks illustrating the level of user engagement. Results: From the 2-week period, nearly 1500 pain-related and 3800 sleep-related posts were identified and analyzed. Twitter was used most often to share knowledge about child pain (639/1133, 56.40{\%} of posts), and personal experiences for child sleep (2255/3008, 75.00{\%} of posts). For both topics, Instagram posts shared personal experiences (53/68, 78{\%} pain; 413/478, 86.4{\%} sleep), Facebook group posts shared personal experiences (30/49, 61{\%} pain; 230/345, 66.7{\%} sleep) and Facebook pages shared knowledge (68/198, 34.3{\%} pain; 452/1026, 44.05{\%} sleep). Across platforms, research evidence was shared in 21.96{\%} (318/1448) of pain- and 9.16{\%} (445/4857) of sleep-related posts; 5.38{\%} (61/1133) of all pain posts and 2.82{\%} (85/3008) of all sleep posts shared information inconsistent with the evidence, while the rest were absent of evidence. User interactions were indirect, with mostly one-way, rather than reciprocal conversations. Conclusions: Social media is commonly used to discuss child health, yet the majority of posts do not contain research evidence, and user engagement is primarily one-way. These findings represent an opportunity to expand engagement through open conversations with credible sources. Research and health care communities can benefit from incorporating specific information about evidence within social media posts to improve communication with the public and empower users to distinguish evidence-based content better. Together, these findings have identified potential gaps in social media communication that may be informative targets to guide future strategies for improving the translation of child health evidence over social media. ", issn="2561-6722", doi="10.2196/11193", url="http://pediatrics.www.mybigtv.com/2018/2/e11193/", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/11193", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31518292" }
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