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It's no LOL: Few US doctors answer e-mails from patients

By ALICIA CHANG,
AP
Posted: 2008-04-22 15:08:39
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Suzanne Kreuziger is a registered nurse who uses e-mail almost exclusively to communicate with friends. But when it comes to reaching her doctor, there's a frustrating firewall.

The barrier is her doctor's own reluctance to talk to patients through e-mail.

"It makes sense to me to have the words laid out, to be able to re-read, to go back to it at a convenient time," the 34-year-old Milwaukee woman recently wrote on a social networking site. "If I were able to ask my physician questions this way, it would make my own health care much easier."

Kreuziger's experience is shared by most Americans: They want the convenience of e-mail for non-urgent medical issues, but fewer than a third of U.S. doctors use e-mail to communicate with patients, according to recent physician surveys.

"People are able to file their taxes online, buy and sell household goods, and manage their financial accounts," said Susannah Fox of the Pew Internet & American Life Project. "The health care industry seems to be lagging behind other industries."

Doctors have their reasons for not hitting the reply button more often. Some worry it will increase their workload, and most physicians don't get reimbursed for it by insurance companies. Others fear hackers could compromise patient privacy - even though doctors who do e-mail generally do it through password-protected Web sites.

There are also concerns that patients will send urgent messages that don't get answered promptly. And any snafu raises the specter of legal liability.

Many patients would like to use e-mail for routine matters such as asking for a prescription refill, getting lab results or scheduling a visit. Doing so, they say, would help avoid phone tag or taking time off work to come in for a minor problem.

Still, a survey conducted early last year by Manhattan Research found that only 31 percent of doctors e-mailed their patients in the first quarter of 2007.

Two major health insurers, Cigna Corp. and Aetna Inc., this year expanded pilot programs that compensate doctors who use a secure Internet site to make virtual house calls with patients. That includes the ability to send encrypted e-mail, a move some hope will increase the number of doctors who go digital.

Dr. Daniel Z. Sands, an assistant clinical professor at Harvard Medical School, is among the early adopters who doesn't get paid for e-visits. He sees communicating with patients online as no different from phoning them, a practice that also is not billable.

Since 2000, Sands has answered patient questions by logging onto a password-protected Web site of the Harvard-affiliated Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He also sets his Treo to retrieve new messages every four hours. He mostly gets e-mails from patients seeking advice for new symptoms or updates from chronic disease sufferers.

Although Sands has had mostly positive experiences, one patient bombarded him with e-mails. She became "pushy" and her messages were sometimes threatening.

"We sort of had this fight back and forth through electronic communication, which is absolutely the wrong thing to do. I should have picked up the phone and called her. Any message that takes more than two volleys back and forth should not be done by e-mail," Sands said.

The American Medical Association says e-mail should not replace face-to-face time with patients. The group's etiquette guidelines recommend talking to patients about the technology's limitations.

Most studies have shown patients don't abuse e-mail. They generally don't deluge doctors with rambling messages, and Internet exchanges may even help doctors' productivity and cut down on office visits.

For example, a 2007 University of Pittsburgh study published in the journal Pediatrics followed 121 families who e-mailed their doctors. Researchers found 40 percent of e-mails were sent after business hours and only about 6 percent were urgent. Doctors received on average about one e-mail a day and responded 57 percent faster than by telephone.

A separate study by health care giant Kaiser Permanente published in the American Journal of Managed Care last year found patients who used its secure Web system were 7 to 10 percent less likely to schedule an office visit. Patients also made 14 percent fewer phone calls than those who did not use the online services.

Before e-mail can become as routine as a physical, doctors need to be trained to handle confidential patient messages in the digital age, some experts say. That would include learning to file e-mails in patients' health records and instructing patients in the risks of electronic messaging.

Kreuziger, the nurse who can't e-mail her doctor, works in a large practice that also doesn't offer e-mail services. She often has to phone patients to check on their blood-sugar levels or track them down about an abnormal lab test - a chore for a person who prefers e-mail over the phone.

"I hate a ringing phone. It's an interruption," she said in an interview.

Kreuziger and her colleagues recently asked patients about their Internet needs. Of the 76 patients who responded to the questionnaire, most said they would like e-mail access to their doctors.

It's not the first time the medical field has been slow to embrace technology. When the first telephones became widely available in the late 1800s, doctors were concerned about being swamped with calls.

Dr. Tom Delbanco, a primary care doctor at Beth Israel who e-mails patients, believes it is just a matter of time before the technology becomes a routine part of patient care.

"Medicine is very conservative. It changes slowly," he said.

On the Net:

American Medical Association: http://www.ama-assn.org

E-Patient Blog: http://e-patients.net

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
04/22/08 15:07 EDT
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Recent Comments

1 - 10 of 11
11 comments

forestcats 11:11:01 PM Apr 28 2008

I can't get my banker, lawyer, car repair, or AC repair people to email me. What's the big deal?
I wouldn't have Kaiser Insurance unless I wanted to be euthanised.

drwgadams 09:33:46 PM Apr 23 2008

I posted comments last evening. Why do you not show them?

howina 10:58:15 PM Apr 22 2008

When physicians can bill for these services, they will use them. If it keeps patients out of the office, they do not get paid. try emailing your lawyer for free!

jam1024 10:53:51 PM Apr 22 2008

The legal liablity is onerous for physicians to respond to emails. Ultimately, the patients suffer. California has caps on medical malpractice as do other states including Texas.

A federal form of Tort reform is long overdue but the Democrats will not allow any reform because of campaign contributions from lawyers. One of the major good things Bush tried to accomplish but failed was medical malpractice reform.

It is time for the American people to demand better and cheaper medical care through Tort reform.

charlies1949 10:16:07 PM Apr 22 2008

I too have Kaiser Permanente here in Sacramento, CA. They are a big believer in e-mails and my Dr. responds within 24 hours. It is a great resource, maybe this lady needs to switch her medical to Kaiser. They really do take care of their patients, and with the right Dr. you are A OK.

mvfreel 10:02:01 PM Apr 22 2008

E-mail response from Kaiser Permanente Physicians is part of their program!
Mike (California)

marathonman3578 10:00:26 PM Apr 22 2008

As a psychologist I take emails and have my addresss on my business cards. No one has ever abused this opportunity and it has been an eficient tool. I could foresee problems if lots of people emailed me as it would take a lot of time. However, we can cross that bridge when it comes. There are potential problems though. What if I don't check my email and something urgent arises? What if something isn't phrased correctly and is misunderstood. Again those issues need ironing out. The payment issue is also an issue that would arise f a lot of time is devoted to emailing.

hermotimus 07:53:39 PM Apr 22 2008

My primary care physician routinely accepts e-mails from me and my wife about health issues. He works for a university medical system and uses their web service for his e-mail protection. Being able to e-mail my doctor and get an answer within a few hours has saved us several trrips tot he doctor's office and has also kept the doctor informed about what is going on with us health wise. When Ihave a test done by another doctor, I send my primary care doctor an e-mail and he will also look at the test results and so, I get a second opinion on any test I have done shortly after the test results are availble. I think is is wonderful that my doctor routinely works with e-mails with his pateints.

rachie1413 07:34:15 PM Apr 22 2008

I'm sure everyone wants to be paid when they go to work, so it is amazing that most people want free advice by their doctor via email. Isn't that not paying someone to work? Also, people think physicians make a ton of money which is not true. Add the $200,000 debt of medical school, overhead costs, thousands of dollars in malpractice insurance, $15,000 or more per year on medical supplies (ie. cotton balls, table paper, gloves, etc.), being responsible for thousands of patients 365 days a year/24 hours a day, and they are not earning as much as you think. Considering a physician only makes an average of about $45.00 per office visit (which is based upon insurance reimbursement contracts) why would anyone want to even become a doctor? If a patient is seen only once a year, that $45.00 covers phone calls, medication refills, staff time to do referrals, faxing, battling with insurance companies for payment, office supplies related to the patient chart, etc. So after all of that time

knute9 06:49:08 PM Apr 22 2008

This is what you get without Tort Reform......

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