How do u maintain your privacy online?

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How do u maintain your privacy on social media websites?

  • Use pseudo names

    Votes: 5 8.9%
  • Avoid Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, ect

    Votes: 8 14.3%
  • Adjust privacy settings and / or interact with friends and family only

    Votes: 36 64.3%
  • Privacy online is not an issue for me

    Votes: 7 12.5%

  • Total voters
    56

Staryy

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New Social Media Guidelines Issued for Physicians

Jim Kling

A new social media policy urges doctors to "pause before posting" and to not "friend" patients online.

The position paper, issued by the American College of Physicians (ACP) and the Federation of State Medical Boards, was released at ACP Internal Medicine 2013 in San Francisco, California, and was simultaneously published online April 11 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

It addresses the benefits and drawbacks of a number of online interactions, and proposes safeguards.

A recent survey of state medical boards showed that 92% reported at least 1 online violation of professionalism that led to a major action, such as license revocation (JAMA. 2012;307:1141-1142). Those researchers were surprised to find that problems ranged across every age group and demographic.

"We decided to work with the ACP to get this information out to all physicians," Humayun Chaudhry, DO, president and CEO of the Federation of State Medical Boards and one of the authors of the position paper, said at a news conference.

The resulting position paper "is valuable to every physician across the country," Dr. Chaudhry added.


There are legitimate ways that physicians can engage in social media with patients.

"It's really the beginning of a conversation. The online media world is constantly changing. There are legitimate ways that physicians can engage in social media with patients," added Dr. Chaudhry.

Email and electronic communication should be restricted to individuals with whom the physician has an established physician–patient relationship. "This has happened to me and to many of my colleagues: A patient sends an email out of the blue. It may be someone we have an established relationship, but not a healing relationship, with. They may ask very poignant questions about themselves or a loved one. We need to be very careful about the type of information that we provide. It places us at a professional and ethical risk," said David Fleming, MD, chair of ACP Ethics, Professionalism, and Human Rights Committee.

One challenge is ensuring confidentiality. Posts on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media sites can be widely read, and even emails can be forwarded. "We have to assume that any time we send electronic communication, it's not just the patient that's going to see it.... So we have to be careful about the kind of information we provide, particularly private and confidential information that the patient may not want shared," said Dr. Fleming.

Many institutions have set up portals for confidential interactions with patients. The position paper urges physicians to use such options rather than standard social media or personal Web sites. "A post can be taken out of context and go viral...and will last in perpetuity. I don't think every physician is aware of that," Dr. Chaudhry explained.

Social media enables communication with "a larger audience than you might be able to in a practice," which can be helpful when disseminating information on issues such as public health reform or vaccines. However, "you have to realize that any comment you make...can have a life of its own and might spread in a fashion you hadn't intended. Our advice is to pause before posting," said Dr. Chaudhry.

Posts can be objective, such as referenced health information, or subjective, such as opinions on matters of public policy. "Both are legitimate ways of responding; we have a right to do that and, some would argue, an obligation. We just have to be clear which hat we're wearing, whether it's a personal opinion or we're representing an institute or organization," said Dr. Fleming.

Professional and Personal Personas

The position paper provides specific recommendations for users of social media.

First, physicians should keep their professional and personal personas separate; they should not "friend" or contact patients through personal social media.

Establishing a professional profile so that it "appears" first during a search can provide some measure of control that the information patients read is accurate.

Email and other electronic communications should only be used by physicians within an established patient–physician relationship and with patient consent.

When a physician is approached through electronic means for clinical advice in the absence of a patient–physician relationship, the individual should be encouraged to schedule an office visit or go to the nearest emergency department.

Text messaging should never be used for medical interactions, even with an established patient, except with extreme caution and consent from the patient.

It should be remembered that trainees can inadvertently harm their future careers by not posting responsibly or actively policing their online content. Educational programs that stress a proactive approach to maintaining an online reputation are good forums to introduce potential repercussions.

Dr. Chaudhry and Dr. Fleming have reported no relevant financial relationships.

Ann Intern Med. Published online April 11, 2013. Abstract

ACP Internal Medicine 2013. Presented April 11, 2013.


Medscape Medical News © 2013 WebMD, LLC

Send comments and news tips to [email protected].

Cite this article: New Social Media Guidelines Issued for Physicians. Medscape. Apr 12, 2013.
 
How do you maintain your privacy online?

You don't.
 
There is no privacy on the internet. Do not post anything you wouldn't say in real life in front of your superiors.


Because they are always watching.
 
The closest to anonymous you can get with social internet stuff is message boards like these where you have a (hopefully) anonymous forum handle. Besides that...yeah just assume that everything you put online can get traced back to you somehow. If someone really wanted to try basically everything can be.
 
I've done it by getting out of the habit of actively using social media. You can just passively lurk on FB, twitter, etc. to keep tabs on what others are saying and doing, but limit what you post yourself unless in private messages/groups (and even then -- keep in mind who's receiving and who else may be able to see). Also, I limit the kinds of photos that get posted on my FB page (timeline approval setting)...people don't really need to see how much fun my life is (lol), I just keep a set of harmless vacation pics and permit only relatively neutral new pics to get added.

Regarding "friending" of patients -- I wouldn't do this. Patients need a professional in which to confide completely,not a friend with opinions and judgments on the sleeve. Consider creating a "page" that they can "like" as a more professional brand for you/your clinic. And only have professional status updates.

Almost everything is tracked outside of social media too -- including what you google, what sites you visit, what you buy, etc.. The argument is that advertisers want to create a more personalized Internet experience, but most people will agree that this practice is dangerously close to crossing the line (or has already crossed lol). Not sure how this can hurt professionalism as a doctor, but I'm sure someone will find a way lol.

Idk just my 2 cents. We are all learning to roll with these unspoken online rules. Just have discretion in what you say/do online and act like you're being tracked/watched... because chances are that you are
 
Only way to get true privacy online is not to go on line at all.
 
There's also a big aspect of privacy that goes beyond social media... people who google your name are likely to find your address, phone number, and other personal info unless you take measures to make this more difficult to find. Having public records online makes this more challenging.
 
Maintain privacy online? Close to impossible if you use online services.

Friending a patient? Would never even consider it, even as a MS3. Hell I don't even feel like friending residents/attendings/ancillary staff from the hospital I've been working at this year, but if I got a friend request from someone I worked with, I'd probably accept it. I don't know if that's abnormal or not, but whatever.

Know your boundaries, know what can and can't be said online, and assume that everyone can read everything. Keep illegal things off facebook. De-tag photos of you doing illegal things. If you friend a patient, then you're going to have to deal with whatever issues come from that (re: the resident(?) who friended a patient's young daughter who then got sued/in trouble b/c that daughter dressed scantily, saying the resident did it on her facebook page)

Be cogniscent of what you're posting online. Don't go on FB and post a status like: "LOL drnk as fck goin 120 down I-95, cops what ya gon do?!"
 
The trick is to use mostly 4chan because it's anonymous
 
I've said it before:

I got completely off facebook 5 years ago. I have never looked back. I email or call or visit with my friends and family to keep in touch. And frankly, if I'm not doing that with someone, then are they really that important enough to me to be a "friend" on facebook anyway?

If I end up going into private practice I can see setting up a professional facebook page for people to like, and then controlling it tightly. There is going to be information about me and/or my practice out there whether I like it or not, so might as well get positive info to show up first in google.

I see no point in twitter for a medical professional. It seems like out of everything it's probably one of the best ways for a momentary lack of common sense to end up enshrined on the internet forever.
 
Don't get involved in talking religion, don't get involved in talking politics, try not to cuss, don't refer to drinking or drugs, don't have any drinky pictures, don't friend patients, don't talk about patients, try not to talk about work.
 
I follow a simple rule of thumb. Don't post anything you wouldn't be able to show your mother.

I'm not all too worried about privacy.

I dunno, there are some peeps who would show certain "acts" to their parents and grandparents :laugh:

But, I agree with you. You make the personal decision to post pics of yourself and write status messages and twitter posts. Keeping it classy is always a good option 😀

It's also a good idea, like someone mentioned, to refrain talking about work and patients. For some, they have the instinct to inform their facebook friends or twitter followers about this specific surgery case or cool clinical patient. No....bad doggie! Keep it to yourself!
 
I think these are good rules for on and offline.

Depending on your audience, yes. And if you think you can trust certain people with certain things, have another think. THE WORLD IS OUT TO GET YOU 😀
 
HUGE issue..

At work: do not do web stuff not work related! A lot of hospitals block facebook, twitter, etc. if you are that addicted either use your phone or set up a vpn for your home computer to access it.

As a doctor, you are very visible. You can google search my name and find me at my residency program, my healthgrades score, my vitals.com score.

Online Dating: My advice: Though I haven't had to do it, I would recommend using a nik-name, obfuscation of your real name, until you know it is someone you are happy with.
 
HUGE issue..

At work: do not do web stuff not work related! A lot of hospitals block facebook, twitter, etc. if you are that addicted either use your phone or set up a vpn for your home computer to access it.

As a doctor, you are very visible. You can google search my name and find me at my residency program, my healthgrades score, my vitals.com score.

Online Dating: My advice: Though I haven't had to do it, I would recommend using a nik-name, obfuscation of your real name, until you know it is someone you are happy with.

You still usually have to have some sort of picture for online dating.
 
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