How a Google printout can strengthen your relationships with patients

If you are a practicing physician then it probably already happened to you more than once. Mature and responsible patients tend to Google their symptoms, medication and illnesses on the web – a phenomenon commonly referred to as cyberchondria. Nine out of ten women more or less decide which oral contraceptive they will take and not the doctor does. She will just let the doctor know whether his choice is suitable for her or not.

A couple of decades ago, the physician has was the ultimate instance, however, over time this absolute power is slowly shifting to a more informed and empowered patient. A circumstance that’s not always easy to handle for a physician, especially if you have started practicing prior to the arrival of the internet and Google being the primary and unfiltered source of information for many people. These times are also reflected in how pharmaceutical companies do marketing. In general, the physician is the person pharma companies are mainly targeting in their marketing endeavors (“push-marketing”). Doctors prescribe the drugs and are the strongest patient influencers. However, since patients tend to inform themselves much more, pharmaceutical companies already start adressing patients with their marketing and PR initiatives (“pull-marketing”). This is (thankfully) a highly regulated subject but pharmaceutical companies find innovative ways of how to interact with patients nevertheless (e.g., through sponsorship of support groups). This fact will make it hard for physicians to advocate old and proven drugs for example, which do not get a lot of attention from Google and the industry.

Now, what’s the best way to handle patients coming to your office with Google print-outs demanding a certain therapy or asking for a different therapy option? First and foremost you have to take them seriously and consider their input. Although it might be difficult, show interest in the patients opinion and findings. In our experience, often times the patient will confront you with very modern and unusual therapeutic regimens that have not been tested in randomized controlled trials and that have caught media attention because of their experimental nature.

Next, verify the source of the print out. Does it come from a trusted support group? From a forum? Does it come from Wikipedia? When has the content been created? Is the information valid? Is it appropriate to use this information in the patient’s situation? Discuss all these issues with the patient. The patient who went at extensive lengths in order to research appropriate information usually wants discourse.

If you believe that the patient is actually presenting valid input, then you should be honest. Don’t try to hide a potential lack of knowledge, but rather tell the patient that in order to verify this piece of information you need to look deeper into the topic. Encourage the patient’s behavior of studying his or her own disease. If the patient is one of those patients that simply want to know just about anything about their disease, then they’ll find out the stuff they want to find out. Your job is to take them seriously, verify the information and guide the patient on whether this is a valid input or if it’s just some shady website.

In the long run, this will strengthen your relationship with the patient. Simply help the patient to sift chaff from the wheat and they will be thankful.

Lukas Zinnagl is a physician and co-founder of MedCrunch, an online magazine covering health, medicine, entrepreneurship and technology all centered around new trends and the challenge of being a physician.

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  • http://twitter.com/#!/CloseCall_MD Close Call

    “Does it come from a trusted support group? From a forum? Does it come from Wikipedia? When has the content been created? Is the information valid? Is it appropriate to use this information in the patient’s situation? Discuss all these issues with the patient.”

    Um… in a 15 minute visit?  Realistically, it’s not going to happen for most doctors in a typical insurance based practice.  Someone paying 30 bucks a month for internet access can afford a 30$/month retainer practice that offers more time to do this sort of thing.

    I wouldn’t mind an apprehensive shrug by my doctor followed by the old staple, “Well, ya can’t always believe what you read or hear.”  It puts the responsibility back on me to vet my info, not my doctor. 

  • Katherine26

    It’s unfortunate the knee-jerk response for some physicians is that the patient doesn’t know what he or she is talking about. Many patients are very informed and have helped prompt diagnoses that were overlooked by their physician. With the push for more patient accountability in new health models and with advancing technology, including patient portals, the stream of patients coming to an appointment armed with research is only going to increase. I recently watched a video about the important role of patient accountability here: http://ignite.optuminsight.com/archive/patient-accountability-video/ I’m hoping more and more physicians begin to realize that patient engagement will only help improve outcomes, and it’s not a personal attack on their abilities as a medical professional.

  • http://makethislookawesome.blogspot.com/ Pam Curtis

    Yes!!!

    Every time I found a doctor that was willing to work with me as an informed patient, we were able to make INCREDIBLE progress on my disease treatment, diagnosis (including ruling things out) and overall quality of life. These doctors served as teacher to me, deepening my knowledge of my body, my disease, and what I can do to take care of myself properly. 

    I know Dr. Oz is showing crazy, no-where-close-to-approved-for-public-consumption medical breakthroughs sometimes. Growing organs in a lab? Replacing a face? Yeah, that’s media hype. I frankly don’t watch that stuff. It’s unrealistic. I tune out commercials for medications. Big Pharma is out for profits and they don’t care the cost of human lives in many ways. I’m not starry-eyed looking for the newest whiz-bang. I’m looking for answers and I don’t care if that is Epsom salts and prednisone. If it works.

    What I’d like all my doctors to realize is I AM ON YOUR SIDE. I know all y’all are crazy busy and have multiple patients and don’t have time to specialize in every micro-aspect of my disease. I’m not your only patient. But I am *my* only patient. That gives me an opportunity to do more in-depth reading and research that y’all don’t get paid for. 

    MAKE ME YOUR ALLY. I’m obviously willing to do the work. Take advantage of that!

    And thank you for listening….

  • http://www.cadencemed.com Matt Langan

    I agree, and I think it is a VERY common occurrence. I would love to locate a statistic that mentions what percentage of patients research their symptoms online before seeking a doctor’s aid. I’m sure it’s out there somewhere. I’ll just Google it (haha). 

    Humor aside, I would also recommend that doctors collect a number of reliable/unbiased online resources for their patients to refer to in between visits. This will make the doctor be much more of a team player and also help them avoid having to combat questionable online resources brought in from their patients at a future date.

  • Natasha Burgert

    Great post, Dr. Zinnagl. During my current clinic day, web printouts are not surprising, nor offensive. I agree with your conclusion that *taking the time* to directly address the issues/diagnoses/medications brought into the clinic by the patient does wonders to develop relationship and communications pathways with families. Ironically, I have found that (when medically appropriate) allowing patient families to pursue some of the treatment options they may have found online with my blessing, actually *strengthens* any additional recommendations I offer. Choosing to allow Dr. Google to be a distant colleague vs. a direct threat is a mental shift that doctors should take to embrace the e-patient generation. 

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