Impact of COVID-19 on social media as perceived by the oncology community: results from a survey in collaboration with the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) and the OncoAlert Network. Morgan, G., Tagliamento, M., Lambertini, M., Devnani, B., Westphalen, B., Dienstmann, R., Bozovic-Spasojevic, I., Calles, A., Criscitiello, C., Curioni, A., Garcia, A., Lamarca, A., Pilotto, S., Scheffler, M., Strijbos, M., Wong, R., de Azambuja, E., & Peters, S. ESMO Open, 6(2):100104, April, 2021.
Impact of COVID-19 on social media as perceived by the oncology community: results from a survey in collaboration with the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) and the OncoAlert Network [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
• More than 90% of the 1076 respondents believed in the role of social media promoting scientific information and education. • 41% of respondents had trouble discriminating between credible and less credible information on social media. • 61% of respondents used social media to stay up to date with scientific information regarding cancer care and COVID-19. • The flow of information on COVID-19 via social media was deemed useful for 49% of respondents but caused stress in 30%. • 52% of respondents agreed that virtual meetings and social distancing could hamper effective collaboration.
@article{morgan_impact_2021,
	title = {Impact of {COVID}-19 on social media as perceived by the oncology community: results from a survey in collaboration with the {European} {Society} for {Medical} {Oncology} ({ESMO}) and the {OncoAlert} {Network}},
	volume = {6},
	issn = {2059-7029},
	shorttitle = {Impact of {COVID}-19 on social media as perceived by the oncology community},
	url = {https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8038939/},
	doi = {10/gmz7kh},
	abstract = {•
              More than 90\% of the 1076 respondents believed in the role of social media promoting scientific information and education.
            
            
              •
              41\% of respondents had trouble discriminating between credible and less credible information on social media.
            
            
              •
              61\% of respondents used social media to stay up to date with scientific information regarding cancer care and COVID-19.
            
            
              •
              The flow of information on COVID-19 via social media was deemed useful for 49\% of respondents but caused stress in 30\%.
            
            
              •
              52\% of respondents agreed that virtual meetings and social distancing could hamper effective collaboration.},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2021-08-28},
	journal = {ESMO Open},
	author = {Morgan, G. and Tagliamento, M. and Lambertini, M. and Devnani, B. and Westphalen, B. and Dienstmann, R. and Bozovic-Spasojevic, I. and Calles, A. and Criscitiello, C. and Curioni, A. and Garcia, A.M. and Lamarca, A. and Pilotto, S. and Scheffler, M. and Strijbos, M. and Wong, R. and de Azambuja, E. and Peters, S.},
	month = apr,
	year = {2021},
	pmid = {33838532},
	pmcid = {PMC8038939},
	pages = {100104},
}

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