互联网如何影响门诊病人和胃肠病学家之间的关系:一项多中心研究。

Vasile Liviu Drug, Ioan Chirila, Ahmed Albusoda, Ion Bancila, Sevastita Iordache, Laurentiu Nedelcu, Ciortescu Irina, Oana Bogdana Barboi, Diana Drug, Dan L Dumitrascu
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引用次数: 5

摘要

背景/目的:互联网提供了大量未经过滤的医疗信息,这些信息可能会干扰医患关系。本研究的目的是评估互联网对胃肠病学门诊经典医患关系的影响。材料和方法:进行了一项多中心研究,其中包括从罗马尼亚五个主要区域医疗中心选出的代表性样本。我们设计了一份问卷,分为两部分。其中一份由成年患者在第一次去胃肠病学诊所时填写,另一份由医生填写,说明诊断并给出医患合作评分。结果:485例患者(女性49.9%,平均年龄50.42岁)中,64.9%的患者可以上网,其中75%的患者在线搜索症状。大学毕业生比中学毕业生更常在网上搜索自己的症状(80%比31.1%)。结论:互联网对专科医患关系产生了积极的影响,但它可能会以取代全科医生的错误倾向给卫生系统带来负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How the Internet influences the relationship between outpatients and gastroenterologists: A multicenter study.

Background/aims: The Internet offers a lot of non-filtered medical information which may interfere with the patient-doctor relationship. The aim of the present study was to assess the influence of the Internet on the classical doctor-patient relationship in gastroenterological outpatient settings.

Materials and methods: A multicenter study was conducted, including a representative sample selected from five major regional medical centers throughout Romania. We designed a questionnaire which had two parts. One had to be filled out by adult patients on their first visit to a gastroenterology clinic and the other by physicians, stating the diagnosis and giving a doctor-patient collaboration score.

Results: From a total of 485 patients (49.9% females, mean age 50.42 years), 64.9% had Internet access, 75% out of whom searched for their symptoms online. University graduates searched for their symptoms online more often than secondary school graduates (80% vs. 31.1%, p<0.05). Most patients stated that they used the Internet to identify the most appropriate medical specialist for their condition. Internet users were less likely to visit a general practitioner (GP) before coming to a specialist (85.3% vs. 92.2%, odds ratio (OR) 0.491, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.24-0.98, p<0.05). Patients who had searched for their symptoms online were less likely to follow the treatment prescribed by the GP (53.6% vs. 67.5%, p=0.004), but they received a better collaboration score (OR 1.12, 95% CI 1.05-1.36, p<0.05).

Conclusion: The Internet exerts a positive influence on specialist doctor-patient relationship, but it might burden the health system with the incorrect tendency to replace the role of the GP.

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