Recruiting Medical Students for a First Responder Project in the Social Age: Direct Contact Still Outperforms Social Media

Joint Authors

Greif, R.
Marx, David
Egloff, Mike
Balmer, Yves
Nabecker, Sabine

Source

Emergency Medicine International

Issue

Vol. 2020, Issue 2020 (31 Dec. 2020), pp.1-4, 4 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2020-06-01

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

4

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

Introduction.

Efficient recruitment of first responders (FRs) is crucial for long-term success of any FR project.

FRs are laypersons who are trained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), medical professionals, and firemen, police officers, and other professions with a duty of help.

As social media are widely used for rapid communication, we carried out a prospective observational study to test the hypothesis that recruitment of FRs via social media is more efficient than recruitment via direct face-to-face contact.

Methods.

Following ethics committee agreement, we informed 600 medical students about becoming FRs when they attended a didactic lecture about the FR project or during their mandatory CPR-course.

Furthermore, recruitment was opened to medical students through Facebook, which accessed ∼1,000 medical students to see if they expressed interest in becoming FRs.

All of the recruited students successfully completed the FR training.

We then used an online questionnaire to ask these students how they had been recruited.

Results.

Out of 63 registered student FRs, 59 responded to the online questionnaire.

Overall, 15.3% of these FR students were recruited via social media.

The majority (78.0%) were recruited through direct contact.

Conclusions.

Despite widespread use of social media, over three-quarters of these medical students were recruited to the FR project via direct personal contact.

This suggests that the advantage of a larger reachable population using social media does not outweigh the impact of personal contact with experts.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Marx, David& Greif, R.& Egloff, Mike& Balmer, Yves& Nabecker, Sabine. 2020. Recruiting Medical Students for a First Responder Project in the Social Age: Direct Contact Still Outperforms Social Media. Emergency Medicine International،Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-4.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1159193

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Marx, David…[et al.]. Recruiting Medical Students for a First Responder Project in the Social Age: Direct Contact Still Outperforms Social Media. Emergency Medicine International No. 2020 (2020), pp.1-4.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1159193

American Medical Association (AMA)

Marx, David& Greif, R.& Egloff, Mike& Balmer, Yves& Nabecker, Sabine. Recruiting Medical Students for a First Responder Project in the Social Age: Direct Contact Still Outperforms Social Media. Emergency Medicine International. 2020. Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-4.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1159193

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1159193