4.6 Article

Digital professionalism on social media: The opinions of undergraduate nursing students

Journal

NURSE EDUCATION TODAY
Volume 111, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nedt.2022.105322

Keywords

Digital professionalism; E-professionalism; Education; Nursing; Online professionalism; Professionalism; Social media; Students

Funding

  1. Florence Nightingale Foundation Emerging Leaders Leadership Scholarship

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This study examined the opinions of undergraduate nursing students in the UK regarding digital professionalism on social media. The findings showed that nursing students generally disagreed with inappropriate behaviors such as posts about alcohol or sexually explicit content and comments about colleagues or patients, but had mixed views on taking photographs at work.
Background: Social media are a suite of popular online technologies that enable people to share and co-create digital content. Evidence suggests some nursing students utilise social media inappropriately but there is limited literature on nursing students' opinions of professionalism in online environments. This study aimed to examine the opinions of nursing students in relation to digital professionalism on social media. Method: A descriptive, cross-sectional study was conducted with undergraduate nursing students in the United Kingdom (n = 112). An existing self-reported questionnaire was adapted for data collection. This was distributed to adult nursing students enrolled across all four years of a Bachelor of Nursing programme. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics. Findings: Many nursing students were heavy social media users (n = 49, 44%), with Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat being the most popular applications. Nursing students were also aware of the professional nursing regulator, the Nursing and Midwifery Council, guidelines on responsible social media use (n = 48, 43%). Nursing students' responses to various digitally professional scenarios revealed agreement that posts about alcohol or sexually explicit content, along with comments about colleagues or patients were inappropriate. However, there were mixed views around taking photographs at work, with some nursing students across all four years of the degree programme perceiving this to be satisfactory behaviour. Discussion: The opinions of nursing students towards digital professionalism on social media are somewhat aligned with professional standards, although students can hold varying views on the subject. More research on how nursing students employ social media is warranted to ensure their opinions match their actual practice in online environments. It is also recommended to educate nursing students about the professional values and behaviours required on social media and how best to communicate, interact, and share information on the various online platforms, to minimise personal and organisational risk.

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