Hochberg Irit, Allon Raviv, Yom-Tov Elad
Institute of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa, Israel.
Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
J Med Internet Res. 2020 Mar 6;22(3):e15065. doi: 10.2196/15065.
Surveys suggest that a large proportion of people use the internet to search for information on medical symptoms they experience and that around one-third of the people in the United States self-diagnose using online information. However, surveys are known to be biased, and the true rates at which people search for information on their medical symptoms before receiving a formal medical diagnosis are unknown.
This study aimed to estimate the rate at which people search for information on their medical symptoms before receiving a formal medical diagnosis by a health professional.
We collected queries made on a general-purpose internet search engine by people in the United States who self-identified their diagnosis from 1 of 20 medical conditions. We focused on conditions that have evident symptoms and are neither screened systematically nor a part of usual medical care. Thus, they are generally diagnosed after the investigation of specific symptoms. We evaluated how many of these people queried for symptoms associated with their medical condition before their formal diagnosis. In addition, we used a survey questionnaire to assess the familiarity of laypeople with the symptoms associated with these conditions.
On average, 15.49% (1792/12,367, SD 8.4%) of people queried about symptoms associated with their medical condition before receiving a medical diagnosis. A longer duration between the first query for a symptom and the corresponding diagnosis was correlated with an increased likelihood of people querying about those symptoms (rho=0.6; P=.005); similarly, unfamiliarity with the association between a condition and its symptom was correlated with an increased likelihood of people querying about those symptoms (rho=-0.47; P=.08). In addition, worrying symptoms were 14% more likely to be queried about.
Our results indicate that there is large variability in the percentage of people who query the internet for their symptoms before a formal medical diagnosis is made. This finding has important implications for systems that attempt to screen for medical conditions.
调查显示,很大一部分人利用互联网搜索他们所经历的医学症状的信息,并且在美国约有三分之一的人使用在线信息进行自我诊断。然而,众所周知,调查存在偏差,人们在接受正式医学诊断之前搜索医学症状信息的真实比例尚不清楚。
本研究旨在估计人们在接受健康专业人员的正式医学诊断之前搜索医学症状信息的比例。
我们收集了美国那些从20种疾病之一中自行确定诊断的人在通用互联网搜索引擎上提出的查询。我们关注那些有明显症状、既未被系统筛查也不属于常规医疗护理一部分的疾病。因此,它们通常在对特定症状进行调查后才被诊断出来。我们评估了这些人中有多少在正式诊断之前查询了与其疾病相关的症状。此外,我们使用调查问卷来评估外行对与这些疾病相关症状的熟悉程度。
平均而言,15.49%(1792/12367,标准差8.4%)的人在接受医学诊断之前查询了与其疾病相关的症状。从首次查询症状到相应诊断之间的时间间隔越长,人们查询这些症状的可能性就越大(相关系数=0.6;P=0.005);同样,对一种疾病与其症状之间关联的不熟悉与人们查询这些症状的可能性增加相关(相关系数=-0.47;P=0.08)。此外,令人担忧的症状被查询的可能性要高14%。
我们的结果表明,在进行正式医学诊断之前通过互联网查询症状的人群比例存在很大差异。这一发现对试图筛查疾病的系统具有重要意义。