| Literature DB >> 33112246 |
Anjana Estelle Sharma1,2, Ziva Mann3, Roy Cherian2,4, Jan Bing Del Rosario1,5, Janine Yang1,6, Urmimala Sarkar2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The social media site Twitter has 145 million daily active users worldwide and has become a popular forum for users to communicate their health care concerns and experiences as patients. In the fall of 2018, a hashtag titled #DoctorsAreDickheads emerged, with almost 40,000 posts calling attention to health care experiences.Entities:
Keywords: Twitter messaging; internet; missed diagnosis; patient engagement; physician patient relationship; social media
Year: 2020 PMID: 33112246 PMCID: PMC7652212 DOI: 10.2196/17595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Characteristics of Twitter users posting the hashtag #DoctorsAreDickheads (N=491).
| Demographics represented in the samplea | Values, n (%) |
| Patient and/or patient advocate | 248 (50.5) |
| Health care provider | 47 (9.6) |
| Caregiver and/or family member | 21 (4.3) |
| Researcher or academic | 18 (3.7) |
| Media, non–health care organization | 5 (1.0) |
| Non–health care individuals or unknown or other | 155 (31.6) |
aSome Twitter posts pertained to multiple demographics.
Clinical conditions mentioned in sample tweets (n=296).
| Condition | Number of tweets |
| Chronic pain | 44 (general pain: 38; fibromyalgia: 5) |
| Mental health | 31 |
| Musculoskeletal conditions | 26 (Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: 19; other: 7) |
| Obstetrical or gynecological conditions or procedures | 21 |
| Neurological conditions | 18 (chronic fatigue syndrome or myalgic encephalitis: 5; POTSa: 4; other conditions: 9) |
| Disability | 17 |
| Chronic illness (unspecified condition) | 14 |
| Gastrointestinal conditions | 8 |
| Autoimmune conditions | 7 (mast cell activation syndrome: 4; other autoimmune conditions: 3) |
aPOTS: postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome.
Major themes and definitions identified in the content analysis of the Twitter hashtag.
| Theme | Definition | Example tweets |
| Belief and diagnosis | Describing experiences with medical providers being skeptical, dismissive, or “gaslighting”; this disbelief then causing delayed or incorrect diagnosis and/or medical harm |
“It took 10 years for my MS to be diagnosed. Doctors thought I was embellishing my symptoms and doing too much internet research. If they had spent that time listening, running the correct tests, and treating me, I might not be disabled to the point I am now. #DoctorsAreDickheads” (@VenusDoom14) “Two cardiologists dismissed my POTS as ‘nothing wrong’ or ‘it’s all in your head’ before the third one figured out my POTS. He’s a lifesaver, but the other #DoctorsAreDickheads” (@Snarcoleptic_13) “this stings so hard when #DoctorsAreDickheads do this to you while gaslighting you about the psychosomatic nature of your symptoms” (@moniquedhooghe) “I went to an urgent care for what turned out to be pneumonia but had to spend half of the appointment being grilled over why I ‘think’ I have epilepsy. ‘Because the neurologist I've been seeing for a decade told me,’ was not good enough. #DoctorsAreDickheads” (@Jenny_Trout) “One doctor I went to, without even knowing me or my history, interrupted me while I was explaining my symptoms & just said ‘You have a psychological condition.’ I said no I don’t.. & he cut me off again & said ‘Yes you do.’ #DoctorsAreDickheads (@d_vaz) |
| Power inequity in the patient-provider interaction | Differential in power (due to medical hierarchy as well as misogyny, White supremacy, and ableism) affecting communication and behaviors between clinicians and patients |
“All I want is to be believed. To have people understand that when sick/stressed, I can't pretend or act and so my intonation is flat. But they won't. And, if I wasn't hairy, if I didn't have external ‘plumbing,’ this would be worse. #DoctorsAreDickheads” (@theAutistech) “Well, the time to care about my well-being is when I’m in the clinic, but physicians often will not. More often if they are men, and particularly more often if they’re white. This isn’t a stereotype, it’s established in the research. #DoctorsAreDickheads” “#DoctorsAreDickheads is being driven by people living with disabilities and activists that I know. I feel this so deeply – I’ve experienced this bullsh*t even if I’m closer to neurotypical – they confuse us and ignore our own knowledge about our bodies.” “Physicians have all the power. They could help us get better, but for all of us with chronic illness, they’ve traumatized us. We’re too scared to come in to be seen. You can’t get it unless you’ve lived it. #DoctorsAreDickheads” |
| Metacommentary | Discussion about the rationale for and impact of this hashtag in public discourse |
“To all the people that are using #DoctorsAreDickheads first off all Get stuffed ( “People complaining about the #DoctorsAreDickheads hashtag because it contains a vulgarity... Do you know if patients use curse words (what I call “cuss words” from home) in a medical practice, they can be labeled ‘difficult’?” (@DrZackaryBerger) “I'm sorry, but #DoctorsAreDickheads is simply honest. Some doctors are rude, some are abusive, some are incompetent. Some are brilliant, but that doesn't mean we can't discuss the generally poor response to patients who raise issues.” (@WTBDavidG) “I've seen as many if not more medical professionals responding positively to #DoctorsAreDickheads in 24hr than I have to more polite debate in the last 8 months.” (@stendec6) “Decent doctors knows they are decent. They understand why the hashtag exists and why patients are suffering. They can deal with a few hurt feelings because they see the greater change that is possible when we stand up for ourselves #DoctorsAreDickheads” (@IntactCervix) “So much trauma is due to us doctors. We learn best from our patients, but these lessons come too late. The stigma about weight isn’t something we talk about in our training. Let’s do better. #DoctorsAreDickheads” |
Figure 1Map of major themes identified in Twitter hashtag.
Figure 2Cyclical process map of themes identified in Twitter hashtag.