Helft Paul R, Hlubocky Fay, Daugherty Christopher K
Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2003 Mar 1;21(5):942-7. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2003.08.007.
Americans are turning more and more frequently to the Internet to obtain health information. The specific effects on patients, doctors, and the clinical encounter are not well known.
A brief mail survey was sent to a systematic sample of 5% of medical oncologists and hematologist/oncologists listed in the membership directory of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Response rate to this mail survey was 46.2%. Oncologists' median estimate of the proportion of their patients using the Internet to obtain cancer information was 30%. Subjects responded that, on average, 10 minutes were added to each patient encounter in which Internet information was discussed. Responding oncologists reported that use of the Internet had the ability to simultaneously make patients more hopeful, confused, anxious, and knowledgeable. Forty-four percent of responding oncologists reported that they sometimes or rarely had difficulty discussing Internet information, and only 9% of subjects reported that they sometimes or always felt threatened when patients brought Internet information to discuss. In narrative responses, oncologists reported both positive and negative effects of Internet use by patients.
In this brief mail survey to a systematic sample of American oncologists in academic and community practice, respondents reported that a significant proportion of their patients use the Internet to obtain cancer information. Oncologists viewed Internet information as having both positive and negative effects on the clinical encounter. Further research is needed on the effects of patients' use of the Internet to obtain cancer information involving both patients and oncologists.
美国人越来越频繁地转向互联网获取健康信息。其对患者、医生及临床诊疗过程的具体影响尚不清楚。
向美国临床肿瘤学会会员名录中列出的5%的医学肿瘤学家和血液肿瘤学家进行系统抽样,发送简短的邮件调查问卷。
该邮件调查的回复率为46.2%。肿瘤学家估计,其患者中通过互联网获取癌症信息的比例中位数为30%。受访者表示,平均每次讨论互联网信息的患者诊疗过程会增加10分钟。回复的肿瘤学家称,互联网的使用能同时让患者更有希望、困惑、焦虑且知识更丰富。44%的回复肿瘤学家报告称,他们有时或很少在讨论互联网信息时遇到困难,只有9%的受访者表示,当患者带着互联网信息来讨论时,他们有时或总是感到受到威胁。在叙述性回复中,肿瘤学家报告了患者使用互联网的积极和消极影响。
在对美国学术和社区实践中的肿瘤学家进行系统抽样的这份简短邮件调查中,受访者报告称,相当一部分患者使用互联网获取癌症信息。肿瘤学家认为互联网信息对临床诊疗过程既有积极影响也有消极影响。需要进一步研究患者使用互联网获取癌症信息对患者和肿瘤学家的影响。