“Influencers” or “Doctors”? Physicians’ Presentation of Self in YouTube and Facebook Videos

Authors

  • Noha Atef Simon Fraser University
  • Alice Fleerackers Simon Fraser University
  • Juan Pablo Alperin Simon Fraser University

Keywords:

impression management, YouTube, doctors, influencers, social media, health communication

Abstract

Despite growing interest in doctors’ use of social media, little is known about how medical professionals want to appear before online audiences. This multi-method qualitative study fills this gap by analyzing the self-presentation of 12 Egyptian medical doctors who create health-related video blogs (vlogs) on YouTube and Facebook. We pair in-depth interviews and focus group data with a critical discourse analysis of 48 vlogs to investigate how these physicians construct their images as both health professionals (doctors) and content makers (influencers). In doing so, we rely on Goffman’s dramaturgical approach to examine the “faces” they wear in their vlogs and the strategies they use to manage when and how each face is perceived. We find that participants present themselves through four faces: approachable, knowledgeable, pedagogical, and popular. Their self-presentation appears to be a negotiation between two roles: part influencer, or social media content creator, and part doctor, or health service provider.

Author Biographies

Noha Atef, Simon Fraser University

Postdoctoral Fellow, Scholarly Communications Lab

Alice Fleerackers, Simon Fraser University

PhD Candidate, Interdisciplinary Studies

Juan Pablo Alperin, Simon Fraser University

Associate Professor, School of Publishing

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Published

2023-03-28

Issue

Section

Articles