How to Create a Social Media Response for Healthcare & Allied Health
A procedure for monitoring, responding to, and managing patient interactions on social media platforms in a timely, professional, and brand-consistent manner.
Purpose
To ensure patient enquiries, complaints, and mentions on social media are addressed promptly and professionally, protecting brand reputation and turning public interactions into positive patient experiences.
Scope
Covers all patient-initiated and brand-mention interactions on the company official social media channels including comments, direct messages, reviews, and tags.
Prerequisites
- Social media monitoring tools configured to track brand mentions and patient messages
- Response guidelines and tone-of-voice clinical record approved for social media
- Escalation matrix for social media issues defined and communicated
- Staff trained on social media response protocols and crisis communication basics
Includes safeguards for Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), Medicare compliance, and health record management under the My Health Records Act. All patient data handling follows AHPRA guidelines.
Step-by-Step Procedure
Monitor Social Media Channels
Continuously monitor all social media platforms for patient enquiries, complaints, mentions, and reviews that require a response.
- 1.1Check the social media monitoring dashboard at regular intervals throughout the day
- 1.2Identify posts and messages that require a response based on the response criteria
- 1.3Categorise each interaction by type such as enquiry, clinical incident, compliment, or general mention
Assess Priority and Sentiment
Evaluate each identified interaction for urgency, sentiment, and potential brand impact to determine the appropriate response priority.
- 2.1Assess the sentiment of the post as positive, neutral, or negative
- 2.2Evaluate the potential reach and visibility of the interaction
- 2.3Assign a priority level based on urgency, sentiment, and brand impact
- Negative posts with high visibility should be responded to first to limit reputational impact
Draft the Response
Compose a response that addresses the patient message, aligns with the brand voice, and follows the social media response guidelines.
- 3.1Select or adapt the appropriate response template for the interaction type
- 3.2Personalise the response with the patient name and specific details from their message
- 3.3Ensure the tone matches the brand guidelines and is appropriate for the platform
Review and Approve Sensitive Responses
For high-priority or sensitive interactions, have the response reviewed by a supervisor or communications lead before posting.
- 4.1Flag responses to negative complaints, potential crisis situations, or high-profile accounts for review
- 4.2Submit the draft response to the reviewer through the approval workflow
- 4.3Incorporate feedback and obtain approval before publishing
Publish the Response
Post the approved response on the appropriate platform and ensure it appears correctly.
- 5.1Publish the response as a reply, comment, or direct message as appropriate
- 5.2Verify the response appears correctly and is visible to the patient
- 5.3Log the response in the social media management tool for tracking
Move Complex Issues to Private Channels
For issues that require detailed personal information or complex resolution, transition the conversation to a private channel such as direct message, email, or phone.
- 6.1Post a public response acknowledging the issue and inviting the patient to continue via direct message or another private channel
- 6.2Continue the conversation in the private channel and work toward resolution
- 6.3Update the public thread with a confirmation that the issue is being addressed
- Never ask for or share personal patient information in public social media responses
Track and Report on Social Media Interactions
Compile reports on social media patient service activity including response times, volume, sentiment, and resolution outcomes.
- 7.1Track metrics including response time, volume by platform, sentiment breakdown, and escalation rate
- 7.2Identify trending topics or recurring issues from social media interactions
- 7.3Present findings and recommendations to the patient service manager
Escalate Crisis Situations
When a social media interaction escalates into a potential brand crisis, follow the crisis communication protocol immediately.
- 8.1Identify the situation as a potential crisis based on volume, severity, and media attention
- 8.2Notify the communications lead and senior management immediately
- 8.3Follow the crisis communication plan for all subsequent responses
- 8.4Coordinate messaging across all channels to ensure consistency
Quality Checkpoints
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Expected Outcomes
Average time from when a patient posts a message to when the brand publishes a response.
Monthly trend in sentiment of patient social media interactions, indicating overall brand perception.
Percentage of social media patient enquiries and complaints that are resolved to the patient satisfaction.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should the company respond to every social media mention?
Not every mention requires a response. Direct enquiries, complaints, and reviews should always receive a response. General mentions and casual tags are evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
What is the target response time for social media messages?
The target is to respond within one hour during business hours and within four hours outside business hours. Platform-specific targets may apply, with faster expectations on platforms like Twitter.
Who is authorised to post responses on the company social media accounts?
Only trained and authorised staff may post on company social media accounts. Access credentials are managed by the social media coordinator under the oversight of the patient service manager.
How should negative reviews on social media be handled?
Negative reviews should be acknowledged publicly with empathy and an offer to resolve the issue. The conversation should then be moved to a private channel for detailed resolution.
What constitutes a social media crisis?
A social media crisis is defined as a situation where negative attention is escalating rapidly, involves a serious treatment or service failure, or is attracting media coverage. The crisis communication plan should be activated immediately.
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