Proper Tweeting Etiquette Guidelines for Pathologists, Trainees, and Medical Students on #PathTwitter.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-2024
Publication Title
International journal of surgical pathology
Abstract
The use of social media in pathology has broadly had a positive impact on pathology education and outreach with the frequent posting of high-quality educational material of potential value to trainees, practicing pathologists, and other clinical and laboratory specialists. These posts are also of potential utility and interest to members of the public, who are now more than ever able to gain a window into the field and the role of pathologists in their medical care. There can be a lighthearted aspect to teaching material with the use of food items/analogies, emojis, or other descriptors, which may cross over into the classroom. However, when pathology discussion is taken to a public forum, such as on Twitter (parent company: X Corp.), there is the potential for posted material to be misunderstood, such as when certain emojis or adjectives may be used to describe a human disease state or patient sample. The authors present examples of potential areas of caution, suggestions of how to create a positive impact, and brief guidelines for social media etiquette on #PathTwitter that may apply to other social media platforms widely used by pathologists (including, but not limited to, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and KiKo). While the points discussed here may be common knowledge and well-known to pathologists who use social media for virtual medical education, the concerns mentioned here (such as using language like "beautiful" to describe abnormal mitotic figures and cancer cells) still exist and, henceforth, bear reinforcing.
Volume
32
Issue
3
First Page
449
Last Page
455
Recommended Citation
Schukow C, Abdul-Karim FW, Crane GM. Proper tweeting etiquette guidelines for pathologists, trainees, and medical students on #PathTwitter. Int J Surg Pathol. 2024 May;32(3):449-455. doi: 10.1177/10668969231186927. PMID: 37533372.
DOI
10.1177/10668969231186927
ISSN
1940-2465
PubMed ID
37533372