Health care professionals’ (HCP) behaviour on social media (SM) can affect the perception that their colleagues, patients, and the general population have about them and their professionalism. There has been extensive research on the perception of HCPs’ e-professionalism within the student HCPs population and the practising HCPs, however, the research on perceptions of the general population has been missing so far. This study had three distinct aims: (1) to examine the perception of medical doctors (MDs) and doctors of dental medicine (DMDs) e-professionalism among the general population in Croatia using the e-Professionalism Assessment Compatibility Index (ePACI) index, (2) to investigate tendencies and differences regarding values of ePACI index among the general population in Croatia, (3) to determine which sociodemographic characteristics are predictors of the ePACI index results among the general population. The research is conducted on a probabilistic representative sample of the Croatian general population. To evaluate the perception of MDs’ and DMDs’ e-professionalism among the general population in Croatia, the ePACI index was used. Principal component analysis was used to check the dimensionality of the items in the ePACI instrument. To test multivariate relationships, a hierarchical regression analysis was used. A total of 1,000 responses were collected, of which 788 participants entered the analysis. Results showed general population in Croatia holds a “conservative” perception of the professionalism of doctors’ posts on SM (t787=28.022, p < 0.001). Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that age is the only significant predictor of the ePACI index for the general population (β = 0.131, t = 2.755, p = 0.006), with older individuals demonstrating a more “conservative” perception of the doctors’ posts on SM. The general population in Croatia holds a strict or “conservative” perception of doctors’ e-professionalism. This suggests that a significant number of posts on the MDs’ and DMDs’ profiles might be perceived as unprofessional. Given that the general population is more inclined to perceive posts as unprofessional compared to MDs and DMDs themselves, there is a need for continuous and focused education for doctors to maintain their e-professionalism that also includes the perception of the general population.
Marelić et al. (Sat,) studied this question.