New Facebook fan pages for all journals
5 Nov, 10 | by BMJ
We’re pleased to announce that individual Facebook fan pages are now live for all our specialist journals. Click on the links below and become a fan of your favourite journal! Please scroll down the page for more information on the functionality and value that these pages offer.
- Acupuncture in Medicine
- Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
- Archives of Disease in Childhood
- BMJ Case Reports
- British Journal of Ophthalmology
- British Journal of Sports Medicine
- Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin
- Emergency Medicine Journal
- Evidence-Based Medicine
- Evidence-Based Mental Health
- Evidence-Based Nursing
- Frontline Gastroenterology
- Gut
- Heart
- Injury Prevention
- JAMIA
- Journal of Clinical Pathology
- JECH
- Journal of Medical Ethics
- Journal of Medical Genetics
- Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery
- JNNP
- Medical Humanities
- Occupational & Environmental Medicine
- Postgraduate Medical Journal
- Sexually Transmitted Infections
- Thorax
- Tobacco Control
What are Facebook fan pages?
In their own words, “Facebook created Pages when we noticed that people were trying to connect with brands and famous artists in ways that didn’t quite work on Facebook…Not only can you connect with your favourite artists and businesses, but now you also can show your friends what you care about and recommend by adding Pages to your personal profile.”
When a user becomes a fan of a particular brand, publication, film, or person, updates from that page will appear in their ‘News Feed’ and may be shared with their friends. It’s possible to see which pages a user is following via the ‘Info’ tab on their profile.
What are the value of these pages?
Facebook Pages can be thought of in much the same way as normal profiles on the site – they have the ability to have friends, add pictures, and contain walls that fans can post on. Pages communicate by ‘updates’ which show on the update tab or a person’s wall if they’re a fan and have allowed the page to show updates. Other key features for businesses include:
- Pages don’t list the names of administrators, and are thought of as a person, almost like a corporate entity is considered a ‘person’ under the law.
- Pages are indexed by external search engines such as Google, just like a public profile.
- Pages can create content that comes from the Page itself, so that content doesn’t have to be linked to a particular person’s account.
- Page admins can send updates to fans through the Page, and these updates will appear in the ‘Updates’ section of fans’ inboxes. There is no limit on how many fans you may send an update to, or how many total fans a Page can have.