E-patient
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An e-patient is a health consumer who participates fully in his/her medical care. Sometimes referred to as an "internet patient," e-patients see themselves as equal partners with their doctors in the healthcare process. E-patients gather information about medical conditions that impact them and their families, using electronic communication tools (including Web 2.0 tools) in coping with medical conditions.[1] The term encompasses both those who seek guidance for their own ailments and the friends and family members (e-caregivers) who go online on their behalf. e-Patients report two effects of their health research: "better health information and services, and different (but not always better) relationships with their doctors."[2]
e-Patients are active in their care and are demonstrating the power of the Participatory Medicine or Health 2.0 / Medicine 2.0.[3] model of care. The "e" can stand for electronic but can also stand for:[4]
- Equipped with the skills to manage their own condition.
- Enabled to make choices about self-care and those choices are respected.
- Empowered[5]
- Engaged patients are engaged in their own care
- Equals in their partnership(s) with the physician(s) involved in their care
- Emancipated
- Expert patients can improve their self-rated health status, cope better with fatigue and other generic features of chronic disease such as role limitation, and reduce disability and their dependence on hospital care.[5]
- Evaluating. This refers not only to the information e-patients find, but also to the source of that information, be it a Web page, a peer, or a health care professional. It also suggests that this evaluation begins, and trust in sources is established, at an early stage.[6]
- Equal. The e-patient expects to be an equal member of the team. There is evidence from this study[clarification needed] that when this situation is not encouraged by professionals, individuals develop mechanisms to manage situations that place them in a location of equal power, but without the open and honest relationship that is also valued.[6]
Based on the current state of knowledge on the impact of e-patients on the healthcare system and the quality of care received:
- A growing number of people say the internet has played a crucial or important role as they helped another person cope with a major illness.[7][8]
- Since the advent of the Internet, many clinicians have underestimated the benefits and overestimated the risks of online health resources for patients.[9][10][11]
- Medical online support groups have become an important healthcare resource.[12]
- “…the net friendliness of clinicians and provider organizations—as rated by the e-patients they serve—is becoming an important new aspect of healthcare quality.”[13]
- This is one the most important cultural medical revolutions of the past century, mediated and driven by technology.[13]
- In order to understand the impact of the e-patient, clinicians will likely need to move beyond “pre-internet medical constructs.”[13] Research must combine expertise from specialties that are not used to working together.[citation needed]
- It is crucial for medical education to take the e-patient into account, and to prepare students for medical practice that includes the e-patient.[1]
See also
References
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External links
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- The rise of the e-patient, Lee Rainie from the Pew Internet and American Life Project presentation at the Medical Library Association, Oct 7, 2009
- E-patients With a Disability or Chronic Disease, from the Pew Internet and American Life Project
- Association of Cancer Online Resources (ACOR), an aggregate of e-patient online communities for knowledge-sharing about cancer.
- Time Magazine article: "When the patient is a Googler"
- Who Cares Booklet by the Federal Trade Commission, a guide to health information
- Dave deBronkart: Meet e-Patient Dave, video at TED
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Fox, Susannah; Fallows, Deborah. 2003. Health searches and email have become more commonplace, but there is room for improvement in searches and overall Internet access.
- ↑ Eysenbach G Medicine 2.0: Social Networking, Collaboration, Participation, Apomediation, and Openness. J Med Internet Res 2008;10(3):e22
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- ↑ Finding Answers Online in Sickness and in Health, 5/2/2006, Pew Internet.
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