Medical Waiting Rooms are No Joke
Emailing your doctor may not be as bad as you think. Which
scenario causes a patient less stress? The awkwardness of the
waiting room verses sending a question to your doctor over
email, the latter choice may be much easier to your psyche. Take
for example the joke below I've been getting in my email inbox
for ages:
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An 86-year-old man walked into a crowded doctor's waiting room.
As he approached the desk, the receptionist said, "Yes sir, what
are you seeing the doctor for today?"
"There's something wrong with my dick," he replied. The
receptionist became irritated and said, "You shouldn't come into
a crowded doctor's waiting room and say things like that."
"Why not, you asked me what was wrong and I told you," he said.
The receptionist replied, "You've obviously caused some
embarrassment in this room full of people. You should have said
there is something wrong with your ear or something and then
discussed the problem further with the doctor in private."
The man replied, "You shouldn't ask people things in a room full
of others, if the answer could embarrass anyone." The man walked
out, waited several minutes and then re-entered.
The receptionist smiled smugly and asked, "Yes?"
"There's something wrong with my ear," he stated.
The receptionist nodded approvingly and smiled, knowing he had
taken her advice. "And what is wrong with your ear, Sir?"
"I can't piss out of it," the man replied. The waiting room
erupted in laughter.
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Funny as this email joke about the elderly man's "ear-ache," may
be, it mirrors the uncomfortable reality of most medical waiting
rooms, pharmacies, and treatment clinics. Accessibility to one's
healthcare provider online can be less stressful and a more
practical means of contact for many patients. ''People are often
more comfortable talking to a computer than they are to a
doctor," says Dr. Delbanco, a professor of medicine at the
Harvard Medical School and the lead author of an article on
doctors and e-mail in the current New England Journal of
Medicine.(1) However, the convenience of emailing your doctor or
clinic to ask your provider questions brings up a myriad of
risks. As medicine and the internet have converged, concerns
about protecting a patient's PHI (personal heath information)
and EMRs (electronic medical records) have come to the fold.
HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act
requires health care institutions to protect patient
information. The Act outlines how this should happen, but does
not make any firm recommendations about how to go about it. At
the same time, strides are being made to make the electronic
medical office a reality. "Office visits between patients and
their doctors increasingly will take place not in person but
over the Internet, through e-mail or even a video conference,"
Dr. Thomas Delbanco and Dr. Daniel Sands of Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center stated in the April 2004 New England
Journal of Medicine.(2) This means that seeking information
online is now as common as dialing 411 a decade ago. From
Drugstore.com to WebMD, the internet is where patients seek
information on maladies to drug and herbal supplement
information.
Patients aren't the only ones flocking to the net. Online use
shows many within the medical field want to take accessing
medical information a step further. Medical providers and
patients alike wish to use the internet as a tool in their
personal healthcare communications. According to Dr. Daniel Z.
Sands, a primary care internist and Assistant Professor of
Medicine at Harvard Medical School, "The internet will
increasingly change patients' expectations of the clinicians, so
that physicians will routinely need to offer services like
e-messaging, instant messaging, video conferencing and other
online services."(3)
Now is the opportune time for both patient and doctor to lay the
ground work and find a balance in both patient's concerns over
PHI and the immediacy of emailing their doctor. Looking towards
the future of online healthcare means measures need to be put
into place to protect a patient's privacy in order to securely
implement the digital medical office.
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End Notes:
1.) Anahad O'Connor, "Take Two Aspirin, E-Mail Me Tomorrow," The
New York Times, Section F; Column 5; Health & Fitness;
LexisNexis 30 September 2005. 7.
2.) Liz Kowlaczyk, "Is Email The Future of Doctor-Patient
Relations?," D2, The Boston Globe, LexisNexis, 27 April 2004.
3.) Dr. Daniel Z. Sands quoted in: Susannah Fox, Janna Quinney,
Lee Rainie, "The Future of the Internet," Pew Internet and
American Life Project, Published 4 January, 2005. 4.