Managing Your Practice

VIDEO: The don'ts of social media for physicians


 

AT ACP INTERNAL MEDICINE 2014

ORLANDO — If you’re on social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, or considering joining one, there’s one type of post you should absolutely refrain from making.

In an interview at the American College of Physicians annual meeting, Dr. Matthew DeCamp, assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and in the Johns Hopkins division of general internal medicine, revealed the type of post that poses greatest danger for clinicians, and outlined other tips for safely navigating social media as a physician.

nmiller@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @naseemmiller

Recommended Reading

More than half eligible opted out of PQRS and eRx incentives in 2012
MDedge Neurology
Exchanges reaching previously uninsured, say health system execs
MDedge Neurology
Copy and paste at your own risk: The dangers of electronic ‘plagiarism’
MDedge Neurology
ACA coverage may lead to more malpractice claims
MDedge Neurology
IOM identifies 17 social factors to collect in EHRs
MDedge Neurology
Medicare releases physician payment data
MDedge Neurology
Physicians could get squeezed by Open Payments delay
MDedge Neurology
Medicare data dump frustrates doctors
MDedge Neurology
Budget chief Burwell tapped for HHS
MDedge Neurology
ACP gives primary care and specialists tools for better referrals
MDedge Neurology