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Documenting Social Media Engagement as Scholarship: A New Model for Assessing Academic Accomplishment for the Health Professions.

Kimberly D AcquavivaJosh MugeleNatasha AbadillaTyler AdamsonSamantha Lauren BernsteinRakhee K BhayaniAnnina Elisabeth BüchiDarcy BurbageChristopher L CarrollSamantha P DavisNatasha DhawanAlice EatonKim EnglishJennifer T GrierMary K GurneyEmily S HahnHeather HaqBrendan HuangShikha JainJin JunWesley T KerrTimothy J KeyesAmelia R KirbyMarion LearyMollie C MarrAjay MajorJason V MeiselErika A PetersenBarak RaguanAllison RhodesDeborah D RupertNadia Adjoa Sam-AguduNaledi SaulJarna R ShahLisa Kennedy SheldonChristian T SinclairKerry SpencerNatalie Holmes StrandCarl G StreedAvery M Trudell
Published in: Journal of medical Internet research (2020)
With more uniformity, scholars can better represent the full scope and impact of their work. These guidelines are not intended to dictate how individual institutions should weigh social media contributions within promotion and tenure cases. Instead, by providing an initial set of guidelines, we hope to provide scholars and their institutions with a common format and language to document social media scholarship.
Keyphrases
  • social media
  • health information
  • clinical practice
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • emergency medicine
  • climate change