医学
社会心理的
人口统计学的
众包
主题分析
家庭医学
老年学
医学教育
人口学
定性研究
精神科
社会科学
社会学
政治学
法学
作者
Erica Mark,Joseph Nguyen,Fatima Choudhary,Madisyn A. Primas,Ethan J. Mark,Brent R. DeGeorge
出处
期刊:Annals of Plastic Surgery
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2023-04-18
卷期号:90 (5): 398-404
被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1097/sap.0000000000003544
摘要
In this study, we investigate the characterization of medical crowdsourcing on GoFundMe for plastic surgery procedures, with overall funds raised being the primary end point.Certain demographic factors such as sex and race mentioned in campaign narratives are associated with the effectiveness of medical crowdfunding campaigns.Search terms were used to aggregate fundraising campaigns for plastic surgery medical procedures on GoFundMe. These studies were then stratified by demographics based on campaign text or author consensus, and were further subdivided into categories based on procedure type.Men were found to have higher median shares than women-raising an average of $609 more than female counterparts ( P < 0.05). Fundraising for themes such as lack of insurance, travel costs, lifesaving treatment, and end-of-life expenses were more successful than the theme of psychosocial effects of disease or social impairment. In addition, those that included a smiling picture of the recipient and those created by a friend/relative raised more funds. Although no significant difference was found in fundraising between demographics based on race, a majority (72.8%) of campaigners were White. Across ~2000 plastic surgery campaigns, a total of $10,186,687 were raised from these data.We identified both modifiable and nonmodifiable factors that influence success. These successful campaigns can serve as a learning opportunity for many who have been marginalized by the medical and pharmaceutical industry, and they demonstrate a promising area for demographic studies.
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