The Multifaceted Role of Social Media in Pain Medicine: Innovation, Education, Patient Engagement, and Challenges
摘要
This article reviews the expanding role of social media in pain medicine, examining its impact on professional education, innovation dissemination, and patient engagement, with a focus on low back pain–related content and the need for training clinicians to evaluate online health content.
Recent FindingsSocial media platforms such as YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and Twitter now play a central role in pain medicine for education, professional networking, patient engagement, practice promotion, and the dissemination of innovations in pain management. Within pain medicine, particularly in the context of prevalent conditions such as chronic low back pain, these platforms directly influence patient beliefs, expectations, and treatment decisions. A growing number of patients with limited access to specialist care rely on social media as a primary source of clinical guidance, raising concerns about health equity and the quality of information encountered. Research demonstrates that structured social media–based pain education can improve pain neuroscience understanding and self-management, while analyses of platform content reveal that a significant proportion of videos addressing pain-related topics are inaccurate or misaligned with established clinical guidelines. Misinformation about pain medications and opioid treatments circulates widely, and algorithmic recommendation systems may amplify engagement-driven content over accurate content. Financial conflicts of interest are frequently undisclosed in clinician-produced posts, and patients generally cannot distinguish reliable from unreliable material.
SummarySocial media presents substantial opportunities and risks for pain medicine. Its low cost, speed, and wide reach can enhance knowledge sharing, support patient communities, and accelerate dissemination of clinical innovations. However, these same qualities facilitate misinformation, unregulated content, and ethical challenges. To maximize benefit and minimize harm, clinicians and healthcare institutions should produce accurate, evidence-based content; follow professional guidelines; direct patients toward reliable sources; and incorporate digital and social media literacy into formal training curricula.