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  Vol. 135 No. 2, February 1999 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Patients Looking for Information on the Internet and Seeking Teleadvice

Motivation, Expectations, and Misconceptions as Expressed in E-mails Sent to Physicians

Gunther Eysenbach, MD; Thomas L. Diepgen, MD, PhD

Arch Dermatol. 1999;135:151-156.

Objectives  To analyze the motivation, expectations, and misconceptions of patients seeking teleadvice or medical information on the Internet. To explore the possible economics and problems of direct physician-to-patient teleadvice via electronic mails (e-mail).

Design  Exploratory survey of 209 unsolicited e-mails mostly sent to physicians by individuals seeking teleadvice.

Setting  University dermatology hospital with a major Web site on the World Wide Web.

Patients  Two hundred nine patients and information-seeking individuals, mainly with dermatologic problems.

Main Outcome Measures  Previous contacts with live physicians, disease duration, level of frustration expressed in the e-mails, and type of information sought.

Results  Many dermatologic patients who request teleadvice have a chronic disease (81%) and seek a second opinion. Seventeen percent express frustration about previous encounters with live physicians. Forty percent of all e-mails could have been answered by a librarian, 28% of all e-mails were suitable to be answered by a physician via e-mail alone, and in 27% of the cases any kind of consultation would not have been possible without seeing the patient. In at least 5 instances patients attempt self-diagnosis.

Conclusions  We found examples for the beneficial effects of the provision of medical information on the World Wide Web but also evidence suggesting that patients are trying to use information on the Internet as a supplement for physicians and that teleadvice might be overused by chronically ill and frustrated patients looking desperately for additional information. Telemedicine via e-mail could substitute a physician visit or telephone call in some cases, but many principal problems must be solved beforehand.


From the Unit for Medical Informatics, Epidemiology and Public Health, Department of Dermatology, University Hospital of Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany.



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