For
Immediate Release
Update on Physicians and the Internet:
Massive e-Health Spending Fails to Spur
NEW YORK, July
12, 2000 – A new study indicates that in spite of the vast amounts
invested in e-health, physicians still under-utilize the Internet,
have little interest in Internet-based medical applications --
other than basic informational uses -- and are skeptical about
the Internet’s potential benefit to healthcare.
Only
27% of physicians believe the Internet will save the health system
money in the next five years, and less than half feel it will
improve physician-patient communications.
The survey of physicians who access the Internet was conducted
online by WebSurveyMD.com, a new service from Ziment, a top healthcare
research organization.
“The
online healthcare industry is expected to expand to nearly $400
billion in the next five years, but greater physician buy-in is
necessary for it to live up to its potential,” stated Howard Ziment,
managing director of Ziment and vice president of the Interactive
Marketing Research Organization.
“Some of the developing Internet-based technologies and
services targeted to physicians may fail unless physician needs
and interests are more clearly understood.”
Physicians
Not Interested in e-Health Technologies
Only
one-third or fewer of the physicians expressed significant interest
in using the Internet for communicating with patients, consulting
with colleagues, participating in clinical trials or filing patient
insurance claims.
As
many as 20 companies are currently developing technology platforms
for writing prescriptions online, but the survey revealed that
few physicians (19%) are actually very interested in using this
application in the future.
Contrary
to the popular assumption that younger physicians are more interested
in online activities, age did not appear to be a factor.
Surprisingly, interest in many of these applications is
even lower among physicians who rate themselves as highly “Internet-savvy.”
“The
lack of physician enthusiasm for many of the developing e-health
technologies is cause for the industry to be concerned,” continued
Ziment. “Especially disturbing
is the even lower level of interest among more savvy Internet-using
physicians, who would have been expected to be early adopters
for these technologies.”
Physician
Use of Internet Is Largely Informational
Most
of the physicians surveyed use the Internet for informational
or educational purposes, including gathering information about
drugs or medical products (75%) or treatments (68%) and taking
continuing medical education (CME) courses (45%).
In spite of the American Medical Association’s position that e-mail
communications between doctors and patients could streamline discussion
of routine health matters, relatively few physicians (20%) use
it to communicate with patients.
Few use the Internet to consult with colleagues (19%),
participate in clinical trials (16%) or file patient insurance
claims (12%).
Under-utilization
of Professional Sites
As part of the
survey, physicians reported their familiarity, use and ratings of
a sampling of 11 physician-oriented sites that represent the range
of existing general sites. Utilization
of these sites was relatively low, with only 26% of possible visits
actually occurring, and only 13% resulting in registration at the
site.
Internet
Applications That Physicians Do Want
Physicians did
express significant interest in two developing technologies: 41%
were very interested in using the Internet to practice medicine
remotely, such as through an audiovisual link. When asked on an open-ended basis to name the
“killer ap” that could most transform the practice of medicine or
improve quality of care, 21% volunteered the response “online access
to medical records.”
Survey
Methodology
The survey was
completed by 257 Family Practitioners, General Practitioners and
Internists, sampled from WebSurveyMD.com’s national, online, physician
research panel. Randomly
selected panel members responded to an e-mail request to participate
in the survey by clicking on a link to the site, where they responded
to the survey questions online.
About
WebSurveyMD.com and Ziment, Inc.
WebSurveyMD.com
is an online tool for using primary research to assess physician
awareness, attitudes and behaviors. The new online service was created to allow
rapid, accurate survey research among larger samples of physicians
than traditional survey research methods allow, and features the
world’s largest dedicated research panel of physicians.
Ziment, based in New York City, is among the largest market
research organizations in the nation, and is an industry leader
in physician interviewing, having surveyed more than 20,000 physicians
in 1999 alone.
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