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Explore the transformation of medical information access through the presence of eHealth, eContent, and eCommerce. Understand the maturation of resources like eCare, eCommunity, and eConnectivity in the digital era. Learn about the impact on medical professionalism and ethical principles.
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" And the times, they are a-changin' " Dylan
Bard of CyberDialogue Maturation of eHealth “5 Cs” eContent eCommerce eCare eCommunity eConnectivity
Automated Journalism Storage Editor Author Referee Print Electronic Reader
Medical On-Line Services Full text of : • JAMA, NEJM, BMJ, Lancet, Annals Int Medicine, Archives Js, others • Textbooks Medline from NLM
Medical On-line Services Advantages • Timely, High Quality/Quantity Disadvantages • Difficult to search • Expensive
Medical CD-ROM • Single journals • Collections by topic/publisher • Reference Materials • Interactive approaches
Medical CD-ROM Advantages • Low cost players and disks • Effective for teaching • “Multimedia” capability Disadvantages • Slow response time • Information not timely
The Internet the future in the present
The Internet the most important advance in human communication since the printing press
Medical Internet • Web of Networks • Millions of participants • Research databases • Interactive and personal • Widely searchable • Massive information source
Medical Internet Advantages • Worldwide, Voluminous, Personal Disadvantages • Unregulatable, variable quality, poor security
Determinants of Human BehaviorA Hierarchy Personal Morality Societal Ethics Public Law
Morality A quality or fact of conforming to or deriving from right ideas of human conduct; goodness and uprightness of behavior
Ethics Principles of conduct governing an individual or profession; the ideals of character manifested by a people
Law A rule or mode of conduct or action that is formally recognized as binding by a supreme controlling authority and is made obligatory by a sanction
The Essence of Professionalism is Self-Governance One of the defining features of a professional is "the voluntary self-imposition of higher than ordinary standards"........"When faced with a difficult decision, the true professional will efface his own self-interests" Pellegrino
Principles of Medical Ethics AMA-CEJA I. A physician shall be dedicated to providing competent medical service with compassion and respect for human dignity.
Doing the right thing for individual patients and populations of patients Medical Ethics
Seek Truth and Report It Minimize Harm Act Independently Be Accountable Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics -1996
The US Chamber of Commerce 15 Principles of Business Conduct - 1924 11. …bad faith…fraud…bribery…public wrong 12. Controversies…voluntary agreement or impartial arbitration 13. …moral obligations of individuals… 14. Lawful cooperation…is commended 15. Business should render restrictive legislation unnecessary
The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (The Vancouver Group) Ann Intern Med, BMJ, CMAJ, Dutch Med J, Index Medicus, JAMA, J Danish Med Assoc, Lancet, MJA, NEJM, NZMJ, J Norw Med Assoc, West J Med > 600 journals have agreed to participate 1999
Ethics statement or “seal” 15% Brand name identification 9% Presence of leading experts 44% Not certain how to judge 32% How survey responders judge the ethics of a medical web site
eHealth Code of Ethics May 2000 1. Candor 2. Honesty 3. Quality 4. Informed Consent 5. Privacy 6. Professionalism in Online Healthcare 7. Responsible Partnering 8. Accountability
HI Ethics 1. Privacy Policies 2. Enhanced Privacy Protection for Health-Related Personal Information 3. Safeguarding Consumer Privacy in Relationships with Third Parties 4. Disclosure of Ownership and Financial Sponsorship 5. Identifying Advertising and Health Information Content Sponsored by Third Parties 6. Promotional Offers, Rebates, and Free Items or Services 7. Quality of Health Information Content
Between 20 000 and 2 000 000 Health/Medical Sites on the Internet Health Searchers Porno Searchers >
US Adults Seeking Health Info on the WWW June 1998 54 million June 1999 69 million June 2000 98 million November 2000 106 million Harris Interactive
On Line Health Information 97 Million US Adult Users Search engine or portal 52% Directly to health site 24% General site with health info 14% Average 3.3 visits a month Harris Interactive 2001
> 50% for specific illness or diagnosis 46% after new Rx/treatment Only 20% before seeing their physicians CyberDialogue Patients Visiting Health Sites 2000
On line Health Users 15% of MDs recommend specific sites Vitamins and nutritional supplements are bought Prescription drugs not bought on line
On line Health Users More women than men Typically older, married, Caucasian & college-educated Arrive at Doctor with print-out Leave with lower opinion of Doctor
US MDs accessingthe Internet 1995 3% 1996 15% 1997 32% 1998 60% 1999 80% 2000 89% 2001 93%
US MD Internet Use Overall 85% Medical information and news 71% Access guidelines and protocols 50% HealthTech 2001
MDs Use Internet 3 Hours/Week to: Research clinical matters 90% Read journal articles 78% Contact colleagues 61% Complete CME 45% Attend conferences 31% BCG 2001
Average time on-line on Medical sites 2-3 hours/week Have looked for/at: Disease Information 94% Medical Association News 85% Medical Sites 74% University sites 67% Online CME 45% Canadian Physicians
Medical Portals most used: Medical Associations 26% Medscape 11 % MEDLINE 6 % WebMD 6% Pubmed 2% University sites 2% Canadian Physicians
Expect their Internet use to increase next 12 months Accessing Disease Info 70% On Line CME 58% Access Drug Info 33 % Canadian Physicians
Agreed with the statement: The Internet is changing the way I practice medicine 43% I take fewer medical journals because the information is on the Internet 37% Canadian Physicians
Physicians and Information Seeking Gathering Interpreting Feedback Observing Assimilating Dispensing Monitoring
Where is the Internet Applicable? 1. Anywhere the telephone/fax machine is used 2. As a library 3. To replace hand-delivered notes 4. To replace letters/brochures/certificates/lab results 5. Orders and results 6. Verbal communications 7. Whenever distance separates individuals or copies are needed for others
Physicians’ “Essential” Internet Applications Clinical Diagnostic reporting Electronic medical records Administrative Claims processing Eligibility authorizations Referral authorizations IT systems support HealthTech 2001
Great for an established patient-physician relationship E-mail Medicine
Verboten for initial or sole patient-physician interaction E-mail Medicine
Values of e-mail Medicine Maintain continuity of care Facilitate information flow Increase meaningful communication Reduce unnecessary appointments Increase patient responsibility Mechanic 2001 BMJ
34 million want to Only 3 million have done so 5 million have visited any physician web site CyberDialogue Patients Contacting Physicians Electronically 2000
Electronic Alerts from Physicians - 84% Lab Results on line - 83% Personalized Medical Information - 80% Charts to Monitor Chronic Conditions - 69% Will Select Physician Based on Internet Services - 43% -Harris Interactive 2000 What Consumers Want
Concerned that e-mail will impact their busy schedules Only experimental methods of payment Potential loss of “high-touch” relationships Consider nurse or physician assistant triage Physician Fear and Resistance
MDs Use : E-mail with patients 26% EMR 22% Electronic prescribing 11% Remote monitoring 5% BCG 2001