More Than Half of Doctors Use a Professional Social Network for Work Reasons

by Alejandro Alvarez

More than two-thirds (69%) of physicians use at least one of the three types of social networks listed in the study, while 31% do not use any, according to the Sources & Interactions Study, September 2014 – Medical/Surgical Edition. This breaks down to 16% of doctors using all three types, 28% using 2 of the 3, and 26% using only 1 of the 3 types.

Other findings related to these specific types of social networks include:

  • More than half (56%) of doctors say they currently use a professional social network (e.g., Medscape Physician Connect, QuantiaMD, Sermo, etc.).
  • About 41% of physicians use medical association/society social networks for professional purposes.
  • One-third (34%) of physicians in this study use consumer social networks (e.g., , , , etc.) for professional purposes.

Most physicians that use social networks choose to read and follow only as opposed to write and post, suggesting that they view these sites as another information source, rather than a platform to interact with colleagues or share their own expertise. 47% of doctors say they read/follow only on professional social networks.

The number of doctors using social sites shows moderate increases from 2011:

 

2011

2012

2013

2014

Medical Association/Society Social Network

31%

32%

39%

41%

Professional Social Network

38%

38%

48%

56%

Consumer Social Network

27%

28%

30%

34%

The Sources & Interactions™ Study is a detailed examination of doctors’ online and mobile activities, e-detailing experience, and exposure to (and evaluation of) information sources including traditional and emerging media, pharma reps, CME, convention and more. The study is conducted every six months and targets more than 3,000 physicians annually across 22 specialties, exploring their media preferences and habits. Sources & Interactions was designed to help marketers and their agencies cost-effectively allocate resources to their overall promotional mix, and provide publishers with specific insight about where their offerings fit into physicians (and other healthcare professionals’) information inventory.

To find out more about the study and get access to specialty-specific data, contact us now. We study physician media behaviors and preferences annually across 22 specialties.

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