e.g. mhealth
Search Results (1 to 1 of 1 Results)
Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS
Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 1 JMIR Formative Research
- 0 Journal of Medical Internet Research
- 0 Medicine 2.0
- 0 Interactive Journal of Medical Research
- 0 iProceedings
- 0 JMIR Research Protocols
- 0 JMIR Human Factors
- 0 JMIR Medical Informatics
- 0 JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
- 0 JMIR mHealth and uHealth
- 0 JMIR Serious Games
- 0 JMIR Mental Health
- 0 JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
- 0 JMIR Preprints
- 0 JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology
- 0 JMIR Medical Education
- 0 JMIR Cancer
- 0 JMIR Challenges
- 0 JMIR Diabetes
- 0 JMIR Biomedical Engineering
- 0 JMIR Data
- 0 JMIR Cardio
- 0 Journal of Participatory Medicine
- 0 JMIR Dermatology
- 0 JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
- 0 JMIR Aging
- 0 JMIR Perioperative Medicine
- 0 JMIR Nursing
- 0 JMIRx Med
- 0 JMIRx Bio
- 0 JMIR Infodemiology
- 0 Transfer Hub (manuscript eXchange)
- 0 JMIR AI
- 0 JMIR Neurotechnology
- 0 Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal
- 0 Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
- 0 JMIR XR and Spatial Computing (JMXR)

Emerging Use of Social Media in Clinical Urology Practice in the 21st Century: Survey Study
In a survey on So-Me use in urology, the American Urological Association found a significant rise in So-Me use by urologists, with 74% agreeing that it had an important influence on their practice [4]. Linked In (46%), Facebook (93%), Twitter (36%), and Google+ (26%) are the most popular social media sites among urologists [5]. Other So-Me platforms in native languages are being used by urologists from other nations; QQ, We Chat, and Ren Ren are the most popular So-Me platforms among Chinese urologists [6].
JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e58510
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS