Conservative Dentistry Journal
Vol. 16 No. 1 (2026): January-June

Ethical challenges of informed consent in patient related social media content

Yessy Andriani Fauziah (School of Dental Medicine, Universitas Ciputra Surabaya, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Eveline Yulia Darmadi (School of Dental Medicine, Universitas Ciputra Surabaya, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Dwi Setianiningtyas (Faculty of Dental Medicine, Universitas Hang Tuah, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Dian Agustin Wahjuningrum (Faculty of Dental Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia.)
Dany Agus Susanto (Faculty of Law, Universitas 45, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Farouk Al-Ghazaly (Faculty of Dental Medicine, Al-Saeed University, Taiz, Yemen)



Article Info

Publish Date
26 Jun 2026

Abstract

Background: Social media has become a dominant platform for healthcare communication and promotion, particularly in aesthetic dentistry, where visual treatment outcomes are frequently shared. Patient photographs, procedural videos, and testimonials are widely used to attract public attention. However, traditional informed consent was primarily developed for clinical decision making and may not fully address the ethical implications of digital publication, including permanent online visibility, algorithm-driven dissemination, and potential secondary commercial use. Purpose: This literature review aims to analyze the ethical challenges associated with obtaining informed consent for patient-related social media content and to evaluate whether existing consent practices adequately protect patient autonomy, privacy, and professional integrity in digital environments. Reviews: Conventional informed consent emphasizes disclosure, comprehension, voluntariness, competence, and authorization. In the context of social media, additional concerns arise. Patients may experience subtle pressure to agree due to trust in the practitioner or fear of affecting their care relationship. Risk explanations often overlook long term digital exposure, uncontrolled redistribution, identity recognition despite anonymization, and reuse of content for marketing purposes. These issues create ethical tension between respect for autonomy, non-maleficence, beneficence, justice and professional responsibility. Current regulatory guidance in many settings does not clearly distinguish between clinical consent and consent for public digital dissemination. Conclusion: Existing informed consent models are insufficient to address the complexities of patient-related content on social media. A digitally adapted and transparent consent framework is essential to ensure voluntary participation, clear risk disclosure, and stronger protection of patient privacy in contemporary healthcare promotion.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

CDJ

Publisher

Subject

Dentistry

Description

Journal of conservative dentistry accepts original manuscripts in the field of Endodontic other related subjects articles, including research, case reports and literature reviews. The spread of fields include: Endodontic research; Preventive, curative and rehabilitative related to endodontic field; ...