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