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<title>STRUCTURE OF CONVERSATIONS OF HEALTHCARE PRACTITIONERS ON EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE IN THE  MEDSCAPE NETWORK, 2014-2018</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1759</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-15T19:55:30Z</dc:date>
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<title>STRUCTURE OF CONVERSATIONS OF HEALTHCARE PRACTITIONERS ON EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE IN THE  MEDSCAPE NETWORK, 2014-2018</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1760</link>
<description>STRUCTURE OF CONVERSATIONS OF HEALTHCARE PRACTITIONERS ON EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE IN THE  MEDSCAPE NETWORK, 2014-2018
IGWE, Ebelechukwu Gloria
The outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) during 2014-2015 generated discussions and &#13;
exchange of information among Healthcare Practitioners (HCPs) on social media and &#13;
other platforms. These exchanges improved understanding of the disease. Previous studies &#13;
have examined the medical aspects of the disease, with little attention paid to the nature &#13;
and structure of conversations on the disease among HCPs on social media networks. This &#13;
study was, therefore, designed to investigate the characteristics, trends, knowledge &#13;
content, and relevance of conversations on EVD on the Medscape network and the &#13;
participation behaviours and roles of different categories of HCPs.&#13;
Conversation and Social Network theories guided the study, while content analysis was &#13;
adopted as the research design. Data on EVD topics and corresponding HCPs‘ posts on &#13;
the topics from March 26, 2014 to April 27, 2018 were extracted from the Medscape &#13;
network website. The data were analysed thematically, while a 1-mode network was &#13;
developed to determine the centrality measures of the nodes representing the participating &#13;
HCPs.&#13;
There were 391 EVD news topics and associated contents, and the HCPs responded to 234 &#13;
of the topics which generated 7,343 conversations, while 157 topics received no &#13;
responses. The trend of EVD conversations among HCPs showed a high conversation &#13;
frequency of 6,479 (88.2%) at the peak period of EVD outbreak in 2014, but declined &#13;
thereafter. The 234 news posts that received responses were on six main themes -&#13;
management (106, 45.3%), risks (33, 14.1%), resources (29, 12.4%), treatment (25, &#13;
10.7%), transmission (19, 8.1%) and others (22, 9.4%), but the ensuing conversations by &#13;
HCPs on the topics focused mainly on EVD risks (4,679, 63.7%). Almost all the &#13;
conversations (7,230, 98.6%) were adjudged by medical experts to be relevant to the EVD &#13;
topics and contents posted on the network. A total of 3,310 HCPs participated in the &#13;
conversations, but only 95 were assessed active. Participation in the conversations by &#13;
HCPs showed that medical doctors contributed 57.4%, followed by nurses (27.5%), &#13;
pharmacists (2.2%), health/business administrators (2.2%), medical students (1.9%), and &#13;
nursing students (1.1%), while miscellaneous other categories accounted for 7.6%. &#13;
Conversations by the healthcare practitioners focused mainly on Ebola virus disease &#13;
management and risks, and were mostly relevant to the posted topics. Health agencies at &#13;
national and global levels should recognise conversations among healthcare practitioners &#13;
on social media networks as important sources of information on Ebola virus disease and &#13;
other emerging diseases.
</description>
<dc:date>2021-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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