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Post or perish? Social media strategies for disseminating orthopedic research

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages 1643-1652

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.25588

Keywords

altmetrics; bibliometrics; orthopedic research; social media; Twitter

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The usage of social media, especially Twitter, among scientists in academia has increased in recent years. However, the use of Twitter in disseminating orthopaedic research and musculoskeletal advocacy remains low. This article aims to enhance Twitter usage among musculoskeletal researchers by reviewing data supporting its professional benefits, providing a workflow for Tweet curation, and proposing new guidelines. It also suggests exploring other social media platforms. The article emphasizes the importance of a unified and strong online presence in the orthopedic research community to achieve the mission of disseminating orthopedic information.
Social media usage, particularly Twitter, among scientists in academia has increased in recent years. However, Twitter's use in scholarly post-publication dissemination of orthopaedic research and musculoskeletal advocacy remains low. To enhance usage of Twitter among musculoskeletal researchers, this article reviews data supporting the professional benefits of using the platform to disseminate scholarly works. Next, we provide a linear workflow for Tweet curation, discuss the importance of data-driven decision making behind tweet curation and posting, and propose new guidelines for professional Twitter usage. Since this workflow may not eliminate all the identified barriers and new institutionalized shifts in policies regarding curation and consumption of social media on Twitter, we also briefly introduce and explore using other social media platforms. We hope this information will be persuasive and compelling to those in the orthopedic research field and be broadly applicable to others in related scientific fields who wish to disseminate findings and engage a public audience on social media. In addition, we encourage the Orthopedic Research Society (ORS) and Journal of Orthopedic Research (JOR) communities to take advantage of the many tools curated by the Wiley editorial office and the ORS social media committee to increase dissemination of their scholarly works online. Twitter and social media can assist in accomplishing our mission of creating a world without musculoskeletal limitations via the timely dissemination of orthopedic information. However, this can only be accomplished if the orthopedic research community has a unified and strong online presence actively engaged in orthopaedic research findings and news.

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