1.Social Media Use and Marketing within the Orthodontic Practice in Malaysia
Yasmin Kamarudin ; Delia Fang Fang Low ; Abang Muhammad Zulhusmi Abang Sulaiman ; Nor Nadia Zakaria
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2022;17(1):87-100
ABSTRACT
This study investigated personal and professional social media use among orthodontists in Malaysia, to
determine marketing strategies and to identify potential determinants associated with their behaviours.
A cross sectional study using an online questionnaire distributed to members of the Malaysian
Association of Orthodontists (MAO). Data were analysed using SPSS software to derive descriptive
statistics and analysis of variance was applied to compare responses between age groups and working
sector. Responses to open ended questions were analysed using thematic analysis. A response rate of
41% was obtained (n = 72). Almost all respondents were social media users with Facebook being the
most common online platform. Majority relied on traditional methods of marketing such as good service
and image practice (94.4%), word of mouth (94.4%) and referrals (93.1%). Only 9.7% of respondents
had adopted social media marketing but 23.6% had future plans to adopt it as their marketing strategy.
Difference in knowledge of social media marketing was significantly different between age groups
(p = 0.024). Concerns over patient confidentiality (p = 0.016) and risk of breaching online professional
behaviour (p = 0.025), as reasons discouraging social media marketing was statistically significant
between work sector groups. Most orthodontists in Malaysia use social media for personal use but only
a minority incorporate it into their marketing strategies. Majority see its potential and predict its use will
increase in the future.
Orthodontics
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Social Marketing
;
Malaysia
2.Health as an investment: Social marketing to facilitate investment in an electronic medical record system in a resource-constrained community in the Philippines
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2022;26(2):19-26
Background:
Health information systems (HIS) such as Electronic Medical Record (EMR) systems are essential in the integration of fragmented local health systems. Investing in HIS is crosscutting; it can address multiple interrelated health system gaps. However, public health authorities, especially those in resource-constrained communities, are often faced with the dual challenge of upgrading and digitalizing local HIS and addressing other more apparent health system gaps.
Objectives:
The study aimed to identify and document strategies that not only motivate policy change towards adoption of electronic HIS but also address other health system gaps.
Methodology:
The author, in his capacity as a local health official in a resource-constrained community,
developed, implemented, and documented a social marketing strategy wherein community stakeholders
were influenced to invest in an electronic medical record (EMR) system because it was shown to also have the capacity to address other priority health system gaps identified.
Results:
The strategy, based on situational, stakeholder, and risk analyses, prompted local governance to first invest in improving the delivery of services accredited by the national health insurance program (PhilHealth), for which reimbursements would require electronically submitted claim forms. Community stakeholders then supported the proposal to invest in an EMR system because they were persuaded that it can facilitate increased financing from PhilHealth claims reimbursements, which could be used to enable not only improvement in existing health services but to also initiate other health programs.
Conclusion
Social marketing using the perspective of health as an investment influenced stakeholders to invest in an EMR system.
Public Health
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Health Information Systems
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Health Communication
;
Social Marketing
3.Utilizing social media data in post-market safety surveillance.
Yu YANG ; Sheng Feng WANG ; Si Yan ZHAN
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2021;53(3):623-627
Post-marketing surveillance is the principal means to ensure drug use safety. The spontaneous report is the essential method of post-marketing surveillance for drug safety. Often, most spontaneous reports come from medical staff and sometimes come from patients who use the drug. The posts published by individuals on social media platforms that contain drugs and related adverse reaction content have gradually been seen as a new data source similar to spontaneous reports from drug users in recent years. Those user-generated posts potentially provide researchers and regulators with new opportunities to conduct post-marketing surveillance for drug safety from patients' perspectives mostly rather than medical professionals and can afford the possibility theoretically to discover drug-related safety issues earlier than traditional methods. Social media data as a new data source for safety signal detection and signal reinforcement have the unique advantages, such as population coverage, type of drugs, type of adverse reactions, data timeliness and quantity. Most of the social media data used in post-marketing surveillance research for drug safety are still text data in English, and even multiple languages are used by different people worldwide on several social media platforms. Unfortunately, there is still a controversy in the academic circles whether social media data can be used as reliable data sources for routine post-marketing surveillance for drug safety. A couple of obstacles of data, methods and ethics must be overcome before leveraging social media data for post-marketing surveillance. The number of Chinese social media users is large, and the social media data in the Chinese language is rapidly snowballing, which can be employed as the potential data source for post-marketing surveillance for drug safety. However, due to the Chinese language's specific characteristics, the text's diversity is different from the English text, and there is not enough accepted corpus in medical scenarios. Besides, the lack of domestic laws and regulations on privacy and security protection of social media data poses more challenges for applying Chinese social media data for post-market surveillance. The significance of social media data to post-marketing surveillance for drug safety is undoubtedly significant. It will be an essential development direction for future research to overcome the challenges of using social media data by developing new technologies and establishing new mechanisms.
Humans
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Information Storage and Retrieval
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Marketing
;
Social Media
4.Effect of Social Identity on Customers' Behavioral Intention to Premium Food Markets
Journal of the Korean Dietetic Association 2019;25(3):178-187
This study examined the effects of social identity (cognitive, affective, and evaluative social identity) on affective commitment and behavioral intention in premium food markets. Data were collected from customers who had visited the premium food markets within three months prior to the time of the survey. A total of 247 responses were analyzed using SPSS 25.0 for Windows. The three attributes of social identity (cognitive, affective, and evaluative social identity) had a significant positive effect on the affective commitment, while affective commitment had a positive effect on the behavioral intention in premium food markets. On the other hand, only evaluative social identity had a significant positive effect on the behavioral intention in premium food markets. These results revealed the mediating effect of affective commitment in the relationship between social identity and customers' behavioral intention. This suggests a positive affective commitment as a key factor for customers in premium food markets. The results would be applied to marketing strategies based on the attributes of premium food market customers.
Hand
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Intention
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Marketing
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Negotiating
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Social Identification
5.Determining attitudinal and behavioral factors concerning milk and dairy intake and their association with calcium intake in college students.
Angela M ROSE ; Rachel A WILLIAMS ; Brooke RENGERS ; Julie A KENNEL ; Carolyn GUNTHER
Nutrition Research and Practice 2018;12(2):143-148
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Average intake of calcium among college students is below the recommended intake, and knowledge surrounding the attitudinal and behavioral factors that influence milk and dairy intake, a primary food source of calcium, is limited. The purpose of this study was to evaluate college students' attitudes and behaviors concerning milk and dairy consumption and their association with calcium intake. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Participants were 1,730 undergraduate students who completed an online survey (SurveyMonkey) as part of baseline data collection for a social marketing dairy campaign. The online survey assessed attitudes and behaviors concerning milk and dairy intake, and calcium intake. Questions about milk- and dairy-related attitudes and behaviors were grouped into 14 factors using factor analysis. Predictors of calcium intake were then evaluated. RESULTS: Median calcium intake across all participants was 928.6 mg/day, with males consuming higher calcium intakes than females (P < 0.001). Adjusted for gender, calcium intakes were most strongly (and positively) correlated with associating milk with specific eating occasions and availability (i.e., storing calcium-rich foods in one's dorm or apartment) (both P < 0.001). Other correlates of calcium intake included: positive-viewing milk as healthy (P = 0.039), having family members who drink milk) (P = 0.039), and taking calcium supplements (P = 0.056); and negative-parent rules concerning milk (P = 0.031) and viewing milk in dining halls negatively (P = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Calcium intakes among college students enrolled in the current study was below the recommended dietary allowance of 1,000 mg/day, reinforcing the need for dietary interventions in this target population, especially females. Practitioners and researchers should consider the factors found here to impact calcium intake, particularly associating milk with specific eating occasions (e.g., milk with breakfast) and having calcium-rich foods available in the dorm room or apartment, as intervention strategies in future efforts aimed at promoting milk and dairy foods and beverages for improved calcium intake in college students.
Beverages
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Calcium*
;
Dairy Products
;
Data Collection
;
Eating
;
Female
;
Health Services Needs and Demand
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Milk*
;
Recommended Dietary Allowances
;
Social Marketing
;
Young Adult
6.Issues of new types of tobacco (e-cigarette and heat-not-burn tobacco): from the perspective of ‘tobacco harm reduction’
Cheolmin LEE ; Sungroul KIM ; Yoo Seock CHEONG
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2018;61(3):181-190
E-cigarettes, heat-not-burn (HNB) tobacco, and other new types of tobacco products are emerging in Korea. These products are particularly popular among smokers who are looking for less harmful means of tobacco consumption, and are highly relevant for existing tobacco control policies. E-cigarettes, which are electronic devices designed to allow the user to inhale nicotine as a vapor, are controversial in terms of their safety and effects on smoking cessation, as a variety of harmful substances have been detected in e-cigarette vapor. Due to policy differences in tobacco harm reduction, the regulations on e-cigarettes differ from country to country, and domestic regulations regulate e-cigarettes in a manner similar to conventional cigarettes. In contrast, HNB tobacco was introduced in Korea in June 2017, and is rapidly expanding in the market, as active marketing campaigns seek to communicate to consumers that HNB tobacco use involves no tar and is less harmful to health. However, the World Health Organization and several professional groups have argued that based on independent studies not supported by tobacco companies, HNB tobacco should be regulated in the same way as conventional cigarettes because there is no evidence that HNB tobacco is less harmful. Clinicians need to expand their understanding of new tobacco products so that they can provide appropriate counseling.
Counseling
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Electronic Cigarettes
;
Harm Reduction
;
Korea
;
Marketing
;
Nicotine
;
Smoking Cessation
;
Social Control, Formal
;
Tobacco Products
;
Tobacco Use
;
Tobacco
;
World Health Organization
7.Analysis of broadcasting review trends after enacting the Guidelines on promotional mass media appearances by physicians.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2016;59(10):763-770
Recently, as the general public has taken a greater interest in healthful lifestyles, the mass media became the public's core informant on health and medical information. However, serious violations of the broadcasting review regulations have occurred in health and medical broadcasting programs. In fact, many problems stem from the lack of expertise and ethics of physicians. Therefore, a more thorough verification of health and medical information and the selection of the physicians to appear on broadcasting is needed. In 2015, the Korean Medical Association established the Guidelines on promotional mass media appearances by physicians in order to reduce these problems. This study aimed to identify the problems with the health and medical programs, including an analysis of review results and cases and to explore ways to address the problems. We found that cases of violation of the broadcasting review regulations were increasing and the violation level was becoming more serious. We also found that the articles of the Korea Communications Standards Regulation that have been most often violated are Article 42 (medical treatment, etc.) and 46 (advertising effect). The cases violating both of these two articles comprised 96.5% of the total of 85 cases in 2015; these are involved with the expertise and ethics of physicians. In light of this, it is especially worth noting some physicians so called 'show doctor (named by Korean Medical Association)' appear on mass media and recommend specific treatments or products for marketing purpose. In conclusion, physicians to appear on broadcasting shall provide objective and evidence-based medical information with professional ethics.
Ethics
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Ethics, Professional
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Korea
;
Life Style
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Marketing
;
Mass Media*
;
Social Control, Formal
8.Problems within the post-marketing surveillance system in Korea: Time for a change.
Translational and Clinical Pharmacology 2016;24(2):63-65
Post-marketing safety studies are an important tool for understanding and monitoring the safety profiles of drugs in the clinical setting. Their importance has attracted not only the attention of regulators for reinforcing legislation but also led to recent changes in European Union (EU) regulations; these regulations have influenced the practice of Post-Authorization Safety Study (PASS) by marketing authorization holders. Korea conducts post-marketing surveillance (PMS) studies, but their execution is very different. This editorial reviews the PMS system in Korea in comparison with the recent legislative changes affecting the EU system. Ultimately, it suggests that changes to the PMS system are necessary to obtain quality safety data while maintaining a global standard of operation. Such efforts to refine the system will enhance the credibility of the PMS in Korea and, in due course, produce safety profiles that will be valuable for public health.
European Union
;
Korea*
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Marketing
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Public Health
;
Social Control, Formal
9.Assessment and analysis of 108 health promotion demonstration enterprises in Jiangsu Province, China.
Qiaoyun ZHANG ; Zhongjie XU ; Haijian GUO ; Jianfeng WANG ; Yuan ZHAO ; Hengdong ZHANG ; Yan XIE ; Baoli ZHU
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2015;33(2):97-99
OBJECTIVETo investigate the current status of carrying out the workplace health promotion (WHP) in the enterprises, and to provide a basis for formulation of relevant policies.
METHODSThe enterprises that declared Jiangsu Provincial Health Promotion Demonstration Enterprise received on-site assessment by the expert group, including organization management and protection measures, health management, workplace, health, and cultural environment. And a questionnaire survey was performed. The data of evaluations were analyzed by SPSS 19.0.
RESULTSIn the last four years, 108 enterprises which had achieved the standard of Health Promotion Demonstration Enterprise were mainly distributed in Southern Jiangsu, including 34 (31.48%) large-sized enterprises, 58 (53.70%) medium-sized enterprises, and 16 (14.81%) small-sized enterprises. And there were 49 (45.37%) wholly foreign-owned enterprises. There were significant differences in the scores between different economic types of enterprises (F = 2.820, P = 0.014). The most deducted points were due to unqualified bulletin boards and warning label of occupation hazards, about 78 times (72.22%); 54.55% of the indices whose deduction rates were higher than 20% were related to occupational disease prevention and control.
CONCLUSIONRegions and economic types affect carrying out WHP in enterprises. The current priority is to standardize physical work environment in China. The professional technical level should be improved, and the government needs to redouble efforts to promote the WHP.
China ; Health Promotion ; methods ; Humans ; Marketing of Health Services ; statistics & numerical data ; Occupational Diseases ; prevention & control ; Occupational Health Services ; standards ; Program Evaluation ; Surveys and Questionnaires ; Workplace ; standards
10.University Students' Cough Etiquette Knowledge and Practice to Protect Droplet Infection.
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2015;17(4):348-355
PURPOSE: This survey aimed to identify cough etiquette knowledge and practice level among university students. METHODS: 190 study subject were recruited from a university located in C city of Korea and data were collected utilizing self-reported questionnaires to evaluate cough etiquette knowledge and practice levels. RESULTS: The score of cough etiquette knowledge was 7.38 out of 12 and the correct answer rate was 61.5%. The respondents showed the highest right answer rate (85.3%) on 'cover with a paper tissue or a handkerchief while coughing' and lowest (20.7%) on 'cover with hand while coughing'. Practice level score was 27.28 out of 48. Among those items of practice, 'wearing a mask while coughing' was the lowest (1.40/48) level of practice. And the correlation between knowledge and practice was not significant. CONCLUSION: Cough etiquette knowledge and practice level was revealed to be rather low among university students. Education and social marketing are needed to be developed to encourage the practice level of cough etiquette followed by better droplet infection control and health promotion.
Cough*
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Education
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Hand
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Health Promotion
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Humans
;
Infection Control
;
Korea
;
Masks
;
Social Marketing


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