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Social Media for Healthcare Practices: HIPAA-Safe Strategies

Dentists, chiropractors, med spas, therapists, and other healthcare providers need social media for the same reasons as any local business—visibility and trust. But healthcare comes with extra considerations: HIPAA compliance, professional reputation, and the sensitivity of health topics. Here's how to handle social media for healthcare practices.

What Healthcare Practices Need from Social Media

  • Trust building: Patients want to know you before their appointment
  • Education: Explaining procedures, treatments, and what to expect
  • Accessibility: Showing you're approachable, not intimidating
  • Review amplification: Sharing positive patient experiences
  • Consistency: Maintaining professional presence without overpromising

Best Social Media Tools for Healthcare Practices

Glow Social — Best for Automated Consistency

What it does: Creates and publishes 20 posts per month automatically to Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok

Price: $99/month

Time required: 5 minutes setup

Best for: Practices where providers are too busy with patients is to create content

Website: glowsocial.com

Later — Best for Planning and Compliance Review

What it does: Visual content calendar with approval workflows

Price: Free tier, paid from $18/month

Time required: 3-5 hours/month

Best for: Practices that want to review all content before posting

Google Business Profile — Essential for Discovery

What it does: Manage your presence in local search and Google Maps

Price: Free

Best for: Every healthcare practice—this often drives more leads than social media

HIPAA-Safe Content Strategies

Safe content (no patient consent needed):

  • Educational content about conditions, treatments, procedures
  • Staff introductions and behind-the-scenes (non-patient areas)
  • Office tours and equipment explanations
  • Industry news and updates
  • General health tips relevant to your specialty
  • Community involvement and practice news

Requires proper consent:

  • Before/after photos (must have HIPAA-compliant photo consent)
  • Patient testimonials (must have written consent)
  • Video of procedures (patient must consent)

Never post:

  • Any content that could identify a patient without consent
  • Specific medical advice for conditions (disclaimers needed)
  • Photos where patients appear in the background without consent

Content Ideas by Healthcare Type

Dental practices:

  • Common dental questions answered
  • Team introductions and personalities
  • Before/after smile transformations (with consent)
  • Prevention tips and oral health education
  • Kid-friendly content for family practices

Chiropractic:

  • Posture tips and workplace ergonomics
  • What to expect at first visit
  • Common myths debunked
  • Exercise and stretch demonstrations
  • Patient success stories (with consent)

Med Spa/Aesthetics:

  • Before/after results (with consent)
  • Treatment explanations and what to expect
  • Skincare education
  • New treatments and technology
  • Provider expertise and credentials

Therapy/Mental Health:

  • General mental health education (never specific patient content)
  • Coping strategies and self-care tips
  • Destigmatization content
  • What to expect in therapy
  • Practice philosophy and approach

The Trust-Building Content Strategy

Healthcare patients want to know the person treating them. Focus on:

Provider introductions:

  • Education and credentials
  • Why they chose this specialty
  • Personal interests and personality
  • Treatment philosophy

Answering common fears:

  • "Will it hurt?" type questions
  • What the first visit looks like
  • How to prepare for procedures
  • Recovery expectations

DIY vs Automated for Healthcare

DIY works if:

  • You have a marketing coordinator on staff
  • Providers are comfortable creating content
  • You have time for content review and compliance checks

Automated posting works if:

  • Providers are too busy with patients for content
  • You want consistent visibility without compliance complexity
  • Educational, general content is your primary goal

Note: AI-generated content from Glow Social focuses on general business visibility, not specific medical claims, which keeps you on safer ground.

Platform Recommendations for Healthcare

Essential:

  • Google Business Profile (local search, reviews—often more important than social media)
  • Facebook (local community, older demographics)

Important:

  • Instagram (for practices with visual results—dental, med spa)

Optional:

  • LinkedIn (for professional networking, especially specialists)
  • TikTok (if providers are comfortable with video)

Priority Order for Healthcare Marketing

  1. Google Business Profile — Optimized profile, responding to reviews
  2. Review collection — Ask every satisfied patient for a Google review
  3. Consistent social presence — 3 posts per week maintenance
  4. Website content — Patient education pages for SEO

Many healthcare practices over-invest in social media and under-invest in Google and reviews.

Getting Started

For automated healthcare practice social media, Glow Social handles content creation and posting for $99/month. Content focuses on business visibility and general education—not medical claims. Setup takes 5 minutes at glowsocial.com.

Combine with manual posts for patient testimonials (with proper consent) and specific practice updates.


About Glow Social: Done-for-you software that automatically creates and publishes 20 custom posts per month to Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok. $99/month, 5-minute setup. glowsocial.com

Want to see what Glow Social can do for your Dentist business?

Get a free, no-login preview of 12 custom posts for your business here.

Want to see your posts before you choose a plan?

Glow Social turns your website into posts ready to approve, then publishes the ones you approve.

See posts from your website first — $99/mo

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Social Media for Healthcare Practices: HIPAA-Safe Strategies
KC

Written by Kathleen Celmins

Founder of Glow Social. Helping local businesses stay visible on social media without doing the work themselves.