Use social media to spread the family medicine revolution

It’s not easy trying to describe the importance of family medicine in 140 characters. Just a few months after I logged on to Twitter for the first time, I joined the “family medicine revolution,” known as #FMrevolution on the social networking site. My friends immediately noticed a marked change in my tweets. “FM revolution?” they’d say. “Is pop radio making a comeback?” If you’ve turned on a stereo lately, you know that’s not the case, but I can’t blame them for misunderstanding my message.

Use social media to spread the family medicine revolution

Maybe radio’s best days are behind it. But family medicine is on the uptick – agreed on by consensus, and nearly indisputable. Twitter was abuzz recently regarding USA Today article about the growing necessity of family physicians in the midst of recent health care innovations and overhauls. As family doctors, your services are desperately needed. Still, that doesn’t solve the problem that family physicians don’t seem to have a great deal of intellectual real estate when it comes to a topical understanding and perception of value of what you do. You see it all the time, from your take-home pay to that question that makes you cringe: “Wait, family medicine is a specialty?” I noticed it in the above instance, when I realized my message could have had a greater impact if I’d tailored it to the masses.

Let’s help them out a little bit. Unfortunately, not everyone has been baptized into the family medicine community, and isn’t our time better spent spreading the gospel than preaching to the choir? The “FM revolution” has a wonderful chance to extend its influence of public opinion, but sometimes, it gets too bogged down in its hashtags, retweets, banter, and alphabet soup lexicon (HCSM, PCMH, SGR, ACO) to be convincing and attractive to the uninitiated.

This suggestion is not a reprimand. Physicians, you’ve got a tremendous leg up on some of the other bloggers and tweeters out there. Your numbers are strong, and family doctors tend to stick together. And you’re no Kim Kardashians or Ashton Kutchers – your message is honest, consistent, believable and empirically sound. In fact, you’ve done something very powerful that even Congress, Tom and Jerry, and the 1987 lineup of Guns N’ Roses haven’t been able to do: You agree. You get along. You have common goals which you work together to achieve. Nowhere is this more evident than through social media – for, when timeline updates are constant, individual messages can easily get lost in the shuffle.

No one was surprised to find out that 90 percent of all U.S. doctors are using social media. But how many are truly using it as an outreach tool? I’m not suggesting you tweet clinical opinions or accept friend requests from patients – issues of privacy and liability are well documented, and I firmly believe in a strict professional code of conduct. But don’t you have a responsibility to “remain a member of society with special obligations to all your fellow human beings”? You’re not a technology user who happens to be a doctor. You’re a doctor who uses technology. Remember that distinction, and urge your colleagues to keep it in mind as well.

The need for your services is growing, and more Americans are concerned with their health care than ever before – an unprecedented opportunity. Tweeting an enticing tease about a news item or medical blog, publicly supporting pro-patient legislation, even telling your friends on Facebook how much you love your job and why: these aren’t merely good practices. The Internet doesn’t play favorites, and you’re competing for attention spans used to 15-second sound bites. You owe it to your present and future patients – and their health, happiness and pocketbooks – to prevent your message from getting lost in the marketplace of ideas.

Bryan D. Peach is Manager of Media and Public Relations, Pennsylvania Academy of Family Physicians and Foundation.

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  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2LRZNHDZS6DU45WQ567LPQ7CMI ninguem

    I’m still waiting for that big Village People comeback tour.

  • http://twitter.com/familydocwonk Jay W Lee MD MPH

    “I am not a technology user who happens to be a doctor. I am a doctor who uses technology.” Viva la #FMRevolution!

  • heartsurgeryguide.net/

    i am not sure dumbing down the medical message to the level of an evanescent attention span is worth a practitioners time. physicians are no different that the rest of the inpatients on asylum earth, there time would be better spent asking a few more questions and listening a little longer to their patients than tweeting and facebooking, and to use a musical analogy and that’s the name of that tune!!!

    • http://twitter.com/bryanpeach Bryan Daniel Peach

      Thanks for your comment! I’m certainly not proposing any sort of pejorative “dumbing down.”

      I simply mean to suggest that tweeting in the patient’s interests will foster a stronger, healthier physician-patient relationship that allows doctors to raise patients to their level instead of talking down to them. The vibrancy of such a relationship will beget incredible productivity when it comes to “asking a few more questions and listening a little longer.”

      • http://twitter.com/JasonBoies Jason Boies

        Utilizing Twitter to connect with patients and provide a steady stream of useful information and relevant articles hardly equates to “dumbing down” the medical message, IMHO. 

        Bryan, I wonder if patients (younger ones at least) are making the connections between a health professional’s tech savvy and how well they keep up with emerging medical trends as a whole. Not to suggest that doctors not using social media are poor practitioner’s of course.  It’s just as a non health pro, I wonder how often patients may see a doc’s lack of knowledge of emerging media and wonder if he/she keeps up with emerging healthcare trends and practices to the same degree. 

        Just trying to add some questions to the discussion.

        Nice article :)

        Jason Boies
        Radian6 Community Engagement Team
        http://www.radian6.com/

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Craig-Koniver/100001463176810 Craig Koniver

    I agree….as a Family Medicine doctor myself I use social media a lot in my practice and have found it to be a great way to connect with patients. This is what I tell my consulting clients: connect deeply with patients in the exam room and then use the digital world of social media to broaden those connections. I find that many physicians use social media for personal use, but don’t really understand how to use it on the professional side. Companies like Avado are going to help change that with their Patient Relationship Management platform. Thanks again.

    • http://twitter.com/bryanpeach Bryan Daniel Peach

      Thank you for your insight! I’d love to hear more about what social media strategies work for you.

  • Anonymous

    The biggest threat to profitability in any business is an informed consumer. The more knowledge the consumer has, the better the decision. If social media increases knowledge, it can only help the consumer. Providers need to beware! Cost goes down as consensus and general knowledge and general agreement about procedures, products and services increases. Social media is a cheap way for consumers to spread the word about bogus practices, bogus methods and bogus procedures. Social media will help to eliminate the charlatans who practice medicine corruptly. The absolute power of social media has helped to cause “Arab Spring” and the downfall of bogus and repressive governments in the Middle-East. The absolute power of social media will eventually help to bring about the cleansing of the charlatans on Wall Street. Eventually, social media will cleanse our Congress of charlatans that take bribes and payola from lobby groups while ignoring consumers and their constituents. Social media will do the same thing for health care and the medical industry in America. Social media puts the power directly into the hands of the people. It’s a power that’s used mostly by young people in their 20s and 30s and they are tired of the status quo. If you don’t use social media, you need to get out of the way. Social media is a power that can not be controlled or stopped!

    • heartsurgeryguide.net/

      you are assuming that democracy is the default position of an informed public and that the cold war radio free europe approach is applicable now. i find that rather naive, the information trinity of authoritarianism is surveillance, censorshipand propaganda.  the government has just as many smart, committed people that can manipulate social networking to their own advantage combating “freedom seeking” citizens. iraq, somalia, afghanistan—take away the central power and tribalism, religion and sectarianism may well emerge instead of representative democratic ideals. do not confuse whether the dog wags the tail or the tail wags the dog

      • Anonymous

        Sorry…we aren’t buying the fear rhetoric any longer. We aren’t drinking the kool-aid any longer. Big Brother didn’t make me tweet my followers. Your “blame big government” excuse may have worked in the past but it’s old and lame and it simply doesn’t apply in this new instant information age. Those that worry so much about these social media inspired movements are usually those that are trying as hard as they can to protect the status quo and to protect their wealth. A lavish lifestyle. A huge investment portfolio. The three BMWs in the driveway. The second home in Palm Beach. The beauty of the people that participate in Occupy Wall Street and in the various Arab Spring uprisings in the Middle-East is that they are mostly poor, mostly jobless, mostly young people with not much wealth to protect. They aren’t affluent establishment types that have much to lose if the status quo changes. Rest assured, social media will bring change and many of us welcome that change because we aren’t wealthy establishment types with everything to lose and nothing to gain. 

  • http://twitter.com/bryanpeach Bryan Daniel Peach

    Hey, I appreciate the feedback!

    My background is in the news industry, which prides itself on its ability to determine and follow media trends. Of course, the extent to which it’s able to do so successfully is a subject ripe for debate, but I can say with all candor that the family medicine community’s vigor and embrace of social media has not gone unnoticed in traditional communications modes (from print and broadcast media to one-on-one, word-of-mouth, in-person social interaction).

    I think the concern regarding a physician’s lack of knowledge of emerging media is waning for a few reasons: First, physicians are necessarily adopting new technologies in their offices to survive (EHR systems are a good example); secondly, the rate of technology use by the mass public is continually increasing; and finally, incoming waves of family physicians were baptized into the new technologies and know them as a way of life. Their analogue and digital identities are inseparable.

    I’m glad that you recognize a gap exists. Frankly (and my tech savvy physician friends may disapprove, for which I apologize), there’s no question that’s the case. But the gap is rapidly closing, and it’s because of the exuberance and genuine heart for patients of those at the forefront of the “family medicine revolution” that the gap will soon close completely.

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