| Literature DB >> 11720920 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many health information providers on the Internet and doctors with email accounts are confronted with the phenomenon of receiving unsolicited emails from patients asking for medical advice. Also, a growing number of websites offer "ask-the-doctor" services, where patients can ask questions to health professionals via email or other means of telecommunication. It is unclear whether these types of interactions constitute medical practice, and whether physicians have the ethical obligation to respond to unsolicited patient emails.Entities:
Keywords: Health Care and Public Health; Professional Patient Relationship
Mesh:
Year: 2000 PMID: 11720920 PMCID: PMC1761847 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2.1.e1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Differences in Type A and Type B relations
| Contractual relationship before the encounter | No pre-existing relationship | Mostly pre-existing contractual relationship |
| Responsibility | Physician has not taken explicit responsibility for the patient | Physician has taken explicit responsibility for the patient |
| Contact initiation | Contact usually initiated by the patient | Contact scheduled or initiated by physician, or by patient |
| Transmission of information | Usually only text (e-mail consultations and chats) | Face-to-face, sound, video, images |
| Access to information | Information limited to what the patient provides | Physician has access to health record or other channels to obtain more information |
| Patient's knowledge of the physician | Patient doesn't know the physician in advance | Patient usually knows the physician or has a referral |
| Physician's knowledge of the patient | Physician doesn't know the patient | Physician usually knows the patient |
| Physician's preparation to receive requests from patients | Physician is not prepared to get requests from patients | Physician explicitly offers advice |
* Does not apply to "ask-the-expert" services
Figure 1Subgroups of Type A interactions
Figure 2Number of unsolicited emails received per week, according to a survey of 23 health information providers
Figure 3Different media are appropriate at each point on the continuum between dispensing general health information and handling patients' problems which would require the practice of medicine to solve. For example, email is a sufficiently capable medium for giving out general health information, while diagnosis and treatment usually requires at least advanced telemedical technology. Likewise, when dispensing general health information, a Type A relationship between the patient and the physician is sufficient; for practicing medicine, a Type B relationship is desirable. The difficulty is that there is no clear-cut line between the two extremes - and it is in this grey area that the majority of patient-physician interactions on the Internet take place