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The Ethics and Responsibilities of Social Media Usage by Plastic Surgeons: A Literature Review

Journal

AESTHETIC PLASTIC SURGERY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00266-023-03553-2

Keywords

Social media; Medicolegal; Ethics; Professionalism

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This review aims to identify the ethics concerns regarding plastic surgeons' use of social media and propose measures to address them. The main concerns include patient autonomy, balancing benefits and risks, avoiding harm, and maintaining justice. Greater oversight and dedicated training courses should be implemented to ensure responsible use of social media in plastic surgery, protecting professional reputation and preventing patient harm.
Background and Objectives Social media has revolutionised how plastic surgeons advertise their work and promote their services, but concerns have been raised regarding the ethics of these practices. This review aims to identify said concerns and develop measures to address them.Methods PubMed, Cochrane and Medline were searched for studies assessing the ethics of social media use by plastic surgeons. Five search terms were used and 23 studies identified. Results were catalogued according to which principle of medical ethics was infringed.Results Autonomy: Patients must not be coerced into allowing their operative media to be shared and content anonymised by removing identifiable features and scrubbing metadata. Beneficence: It is difficult to balance the benefit to patients of posting photographs for educational purposes with the risk of identifiable features being present, particularly within craniofacial surgery. Non-maleficence: Taking operative media could be a distraction from the patient and lengthen the procedure which could lead to harm. Any content posted on social media should be adapted to avoid trivialisation or sexualisation. Justice: Surgeons should not entertain their audience to increase their following at the expense of patients.Conclusions Greater oversight of social media use by plastic surgeons is required to avoid patient harm and tarnishing of the specialty's professional standing. Professional bodies should be tasked with devising a course dedicated to the responsible use of these platforms. This should ensure the public's trust in the specialty does not become eroded and patients are not harmed by unethical social media use.

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