1. Variation in academic neurosurgery departments’ #neurosurgery social media influence
- Author
-
Michael B. Cloney, Benjamin Hopkins, Anastasios Roumeliotis, Najib El Tecle, and Nader S. Dahdaleh
- Subjects
Academic neurosurgery ,Neurosurgery ,Influencer ,Social media ,Facebook ,Instagram ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: Social media use is increasingly common among academic neurosurgery departments, but its relationship with academic metrics remains underexamined. Methods: We examine the relationship between American academic neurosurgery departments’ number of followers on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook and the following academic metrics: Doximity Residency rankings, US News & World Report rankings (USNWR) of their affiliated medical schools, and the amount of NIH funding of those schools. Results: Few departments had disproportionate number of followers. A greater proportion of programs had Twitter accounts (88.9%) than had Instagram (72.2%) or Facebook (51.9%) accounts (p=0.0001). Programs identified as ''Influencers'' had more departmental NIH funding (p=0.044), more institutional NIH funding (p=0.035), better Doximity residency rankings (p=0.044), and better affiliated medical school rankings (p=0.002). Number of Twitter followers had the strongest correlation with academic metrics, yet only modest correlations were identified to departmental NIH funding (R=0.496, p=0.0001), institutional NIH funding (R=0.387, p=0.0072), Doximity residency rank (R=0.411, p=0.0020), and affiliated medical school ranking (R=0.545,p
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF