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      Systems to support scholarly social media: a qualitative exploration of enablers and barriers to new scholarship in academic medicine

      , , , ,
      Canadian Medical Education Journal
      The Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada

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          Abstract

          Introduction: As academia begins to incorporate modern communication technologies into its scholarly structures, there are both enablers and barriers which foster academics’ uptake of these innovations. Those who are early adopters of academic social media - whether it be for education, research-related networking, or knowledge translation - may therefore be best positioned to highlight both enablers and barriers within their work environments. Methods: The authors conducted a constructivist grounded theory study to discern what prominent practitioners of academic social media (e.g. Twitter) have encountered in their careers. Participants were recruited via a snowball sampling technique and invited to participate in semi-structured interviews. Three investigators engaged in constant comparative analysis of incoming transcripts. To enhance rigour, we conducted an audit of the analysis and a participant member check. Results: Seventeen emerging influencers in the field of academic social media were recruited. After axial coding, the 30 enablers and 21 barriers to academic social media use were mapped to three spheres of influence: personal, institutional, and virtual. The investigators propose a framework that organizes these enablers and barriers around a tipping point where sustainability becomes possible. Conclusions: Multiple enablers and barriers were described to influence social media users within academic medicine. By organizing these facets into a personal, institutional, and virtual framework along a spectrum, we can begin to understand the underlying structures that potentiate the academic ecosystems in which social media and similar innovations may flourish.

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          Supporting the Health Care Workforce During the COVID-19 Global Epidemic

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              SNOWBALL VERSUS RESPONDENT-DRIVEN SAMPLING.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Canadian Medical Education Journal
                Can. Med. Ed. J
                The Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada
                1923-1202
                August 04 2019
                September 09 2021
                Article
                10.36834/cmej.72490
                bd5b151a-2621-458d-9429-c5531b6df30f
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0

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