| Literature DB >> 25470407 |
James Brown1, Christopher Ryan, Anthony Harris.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Doctors are uncertain of their ethical and legal obligations when communicating with patients online. Professional guidelines for patient-doctor interaction online have been written with limited quantitative data about doctors' current usage and attitudes toward the medium. Further research into these trends will help to inform more focused policy and guidelines for doctors communicating with patients online.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; ethics; health communication; health policy; patient-physician relations; professional practice; social media
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25470407 PMCID: PMC4275505 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.3589
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Participant demographics (n=187).
| Demographics | n (%) | |
|
| ||
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| Less than 25 | 2 (1.1) |
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| 25-35 | 43 (23.0) |
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| 36-45 | 40 (21.4) |
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| 46-55 | 45 (24.1) |
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| 56-65 | 29 (15.5) |
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| 66-75 | 11 (5.9) |
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| Greater than 75 | 5 (2.7) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
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| Male | 95 (50.8) |
|
| Female | 80 (42.8) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
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| ||
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| Rural | 58 (31.0) |
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| Metropolitan | 117 (62.6) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
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| Intern / junior medical officer | 17 (9.0) |
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| Doctors undertaking specialty training | 36 (19.2) |
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| Specialist physicians | 72 (38.5) |
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| General practitioner | 46 (24.6) |
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| Not presently practicing | 1 (0.6) |
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| Retired | 2 (1.1) |
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| Other | 1 (0.6) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
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| ||
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| Private only | 65 (34.8) |
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| Public only | 71 (38.0) |
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| Both public and private | 37 (19.8) |
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| Not applicable | 2 (1.1) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
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| ||
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| Less than 10 | 48 (25.7) |
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| 10-19 | 39 (20.9) |
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| 20-29 | 37 (19.8) |
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| 30-39 | 37 (19.8) |
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| 40-49 | 9 (4.8) |
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| Greater than 50 | 5 (2.7) |
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| Missing | 12 (6.4) |
Doctors’ response to friend request from a patient (n=155).
| How would you respond to a patient who sent you a friend request on Facebook? | n (%) |
| Accept the request | 4 (2.6) |
| Decline the request and do nothing more | 54 (34.8) |
| Decline the request and send a private message explaining why | 18 (11.6) |
| Decline the request and discuss at the next consultation | 44 (28.4) |
| Do nothing | 35 (22.6) |
Doctors’ use of publically available patient information (n=180).
| If you were to use publicly available online information about a patient to assist in their treatment, would you, as the doctor, discuss it with the patient? | n (%) |
| Yes, always | 72 (40.0) |
| Yes, sometimes | 18 (8.9) |
| Yes, rarely | 4 (2.2) |
| No | 4 (2.2) |
| Unsure | 37 (20.6) |
| I would not use publicly available online information | 47 (26.1) |
Examples of online ethical dilemmas.
| Dilemma | Yes | No | Unsure |
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
| Do doctors have a duty to rebut inappropriate or inaccurate health information posted online? eg, a blogger saying that sex without a condom is safe. | 69 (38.1) | 53 (29.3) | 59 (32.6) |
| Have you at any time searched for publicly available online information about a patient? eg, “Googled” a patient to find more information about them. | 29 (16.1) | 150 (83.3) | 1 (0.6) |
| Is it appropriate for doctors to look up publicly available online information about a patient in an emergency? eg, searching a patient’s Facebook page for information following a suicide attempt. | 68 (37.8) | 48 (26.7) | 64 (35.6) |
| Is it appropriate for doctors to look up publicly available online information about a patient as part of regular clinical practice? eg, monitoring a pro-anorexia forum for posts made by one of your patients. | 30 (16.7) | 77 (42.8) | 73 (40.6) |