Social Media Usage in Kuwait: A Comparison of Perspectives Between Healthcare Practitioners and Patients
This addresses the gap in understanding social media's role in healthcare in the Arabian Gulf region, but it is incremental as it builds on existing research in other contexts.
The study investigated social media usage for healthcare purposes in Kuwait, finding a decrease in such usage among both patients and practitioners, with patients being more aware of health education and support activities.
Social Media has been transforming numerous activities of everyday life, impacting also healthcare. However, few studies investigate the medical use of social media by patients and medical practitioners, especially in the Arabian Gulf region and Kuwait. To understand the behavior of patients and medical practitioners in social media toward healthcare and medical purposes, we conducted user studies. Through an online survey, we identified a decrease in patients and medical practitioners use of social media for medical purposes. Patients reported to be more aware than practitioners concerning: health education, health-related network support, and communication activities. While practitioners use social media mostly as a source of medical information, for clinician marketing and for professional development. The findings highlighted the need to design a social media platform that support healthcare online campaign, professional career identity, medical repository, and social privacy setting to increase users engagements toward medical purposes.