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Using Twitter Fame to Advocate for Emergency Medicine

By Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, MS, MA, FACEP | on May 18, 2018 | 3 Comments
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Using Twitter Fame to Advocate for Emergency Medicine

EC: I’ve really come around on this. I used to be a bit of an academic snob, where the press part was this little blip at the end of research. Then I realized the power of having a big, public voice and how you can amplify your work by spending time on the public end of things. I have projects that I spent years on that eight people haven’t read even though it was published in a decent journal. I publish one thing in SELF magazine or the Huffington Post that gets thousands of reads on the first day, and so I wonder if learning how to cultivate relationships with popular press and spending time on social media should be carved-out time, with deliberate training and practice, just like we train people on how to write grants. If we really want to have translation to the public and public health, we should take that part seriously. I also have a number of hard-core academic accomplishments that have only happened because of Twitter. There’s no question that my academic work is stronger because of social media.

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Explore This Issue
ACEP Now: Vol 37 – No 05 – May 2018

Pages: 1 2 3 4 | Single Page

Topics: @choo_ekDr. Esther ChooRacismSocial MediaTechnologyTwitter

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About the Author

Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, MS, MA, FACEP

Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, MS, MA, FACEP, is Medical Editor in Chief of ACEP Now, an instructor at Harvard Medical School and an attending physician in department of emergency medicine at Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston. Follow him on twitter @JeremyFaust.

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3 Responses to “Using Twitter Fame to Advocate for Emergency Medicine”

  1. June 9, 2018

    Mark Buettner Reply

    Thank you for the article Dr. Faust. Congratulations on your new found fame Dr. Choo. Wow, SELF, “Huffpo” and CNN after Just one Tweet? Just think of it, an appearance on CNN after just one Tweet? As they say, “Only in America” I guess. I do have a question about the racism you experienced. Was it exclusively the caucasian nationalists that were racist toward you? Did you experience any racism from nationalists of other races? I served in the U.S. Army with honorable men and women from various different races that were patriotic nationalists. In fact, I paired my shelter half (each soldier carries a half in the field) with the most patriotic nationalist I have ever met, Gilbert C. Gilbert was hispanic and hailed from Chicago. Oh boy was he proud of the Stars and Stripes. We became very good friends. Gilbert and I spent six weeks sleeping inside that tiny tent during a bitter cold winter, in a dusty and desolate desert. We remained bunk mates once our unit moved into the barracks. We did this because we were two young nationalists serving our country. We were protecting the very freedom that you exercised when you tweeted that people like me are racists. I am White and because of my sense of “Nationalism” I served OUR country. Dr. Choo you have made a mistake. Perhaps you meant “White Supremacists” not “White Nationalists”. I do not believe you truly hold the opinion that people like me are all racists. However, I will not say the same for CNN when they regularly mix the two identities. In closing I do have this to say: Dr. Choo, Dr. Faust and ACEP NOW editorial board, take a moment and reflect on why and how this article, in the form that it is in, made it to print in “The Official Voice of Emergency Medicine”.

    • June 9, 2018

      Taz Reply

      You are not the only one who served this great country. I’m Black, an emergency physician and an Army veteran who served in Bosnia as Chief of the ED. Dr. Choo spoke of her experience in her ED. I don’t think she needs to qualify it to anyone. It was her experience and her perception. Let her be.

      Did your friend, Gilbert, describe himself as a nationalist or is that your description of him? True nationalists are indeed patriots. White nationalists are not. You have the unfortunate distinction of being White and a nationalist/patriot. I get the difference, but many will not. That is thanks to the White Nationalists who have bastardized the meaning of the name. And they are racists. I don’t think that is an issue you should take up with Dr. Choo. Take it up with the White Nationalists.

      The “Official Voice of Emergency Medicine” is each of us who are emergency physicians. Each voice is the the official voice.

  2. April 6, 2021

    Bradley R. Caloia D.O. Reply

    It truly is shameful that the current poisonous political atmosphere has infiltrated even our ranks. Everyday it seems divisive ideas, tribalism and critical race theory creep further into our institutions. It helps nothing and serves only to prevent us from even listening to each other. A cancer. Dr. Choo is on record making comments about “truly exhausting white people” and multiple tweets stereotyping and labelling people. She claims to be the victim of the very racism she is visibly spreading. It is a growing frustration to see not only respected individuals on Twitter, but our colleges and our publications spreading these destructive ideas. Our charter, our very duty is to approach our patients without regard to color, religion, status. We take all comers. We are those who truly make a difference day in and day out for our patients regardless of how they identify. When we are giving air time to grifters like Ibram X. Kendi and giving voice to frankly racist policies, I can say with absolute certainty that this publication is drifting away from the official voice of the majority of EM and becoming a tool of a radical few.

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