Social Media Professionalism and Boundaries for Healthcare Professionals
Course DescriptionSocial Media Professionalism and Boundaries for Healthcare Professionals course focuses on the ethical, professional, and practical challenges that arise from the use of social media and digital platforms in modern healthcare practice. In the United States, social media-related concerns are an increasingly common cause of complaints, employer action, disciplinary proceedings, and reputational harm. Issues often arise not from malicious intent, but from poor judgment, blurred boundaries, lack of insight, or misunderstanding of how online behaviour is perceived by patients, colleagues, employers, and regulators.
This course is designed for all healthcare professionals practising in the USA, including physicians, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician associates, pharmacists, dentists, therapists, allied health professionals, trainees, and healthcare leaders. It is particularly relevant for professionals who use social media for personal, educational, advocacy, or professional purposes, those who have received feedback or complaints relating to online behaviour, or those seeking to reduce professional and regulatory risk.
The course takes a practical, regulator-aware approach to social media use, focusing on professionalism, boundaries, confidentiality, public trust, digital permanence, tone, insight, and remediation. It explores how social media conduct is assessed in US healthcare practice, why "personal" accounts are not truly private, and how online behaviour can affect fitness to practise, employment, and patient trust. The course supports CPD, remediation, and ongoing professional development, helping clinicians navigate social media safely, ethically, and professionally.