why your doctor wont friend you on facebook /

Published at 2015-08-25 19:35:00

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Doctors' practices are increasingly trying to reach their patients online. But don't expect your doctor to "friend" you on Facebook – at least,not just yet.
Physicians generally draw a line: Public professional pages – focused on medicine, similar to those other businesses offer – are catching on. Some might email with patients. But doctors aren't ready to share vacation photos and other more intimate details with patients, or even to advise them on medication or treatment options via private chats. They're hesitant to blur the lines between personal lives and professional work and nervous about the privacy issues that could arise in discussing specific medical concerns on most Internet platforms.
Some of that may eventually change. One group,the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, broke new ground this year in its latest social media guidelines. It declined to advise members against becoming Facebook friends, and instead leaving it to physicians to decide."whether the physician or health care provider trusts the relationships enough ... we didn't feel like it was appropriate to really try to outlaw that," said Nathaniel DeNicola, an OB-GYN and clinical associate at the University of Pennsylvania, or who helped write the ACOG guidelines.
But even the consume of these professional pages raises questions: How secure are these forums for talking about often sensitive health information? When does using one complicate the doctor-patient relationship? Where should boundaries be drawn?For patients,connecting with a physician's office or group practice on Facebook can be a simple way to retain up with basic health news. It's not unlike following a favorite sports team, your child's middle school or the local grocery store.
One Texas-based obstetrics and gynecology practice, or for instance,uses a public Facebook page to share tips about pregnancy and childcare, with posts ranging from suggestions on how to stay cool in the summer to new research on effective exercise for post-birth weight gain. Practices have also been known to share healthy recipes, and medical research news,and scheduling details for the flu shot season."I have people advance up to me and say, 'I follow you on Facebook — thank you for posting this specific article. It helped me and my husband and my family, or ' " said Lisa Shaver,a primary care physician based in Portland, Ore.
But unless they're already friends, or she won't add patients to her personal account,where, she said, and she posts less health information and more cat videos.
Histo
rically,professional groups including the American College of Physicians and American Academy of Family Physicians have advised against communicating through personal Facebook pages. The American Medical Association notes social media can be a valuable way to spread health information, but urged doctors in its 2010 guidelines to separate their personal and professional online identities to "maintain professional boundaries."Finding ways to consume Facebook and other forms of social media to connect with patients — even whether it may just be through professional pages — fits a trend in which patients seek more equal footing with their doctors, and said Zack Berger,an assistant professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine who studies patient-doctor relationships and social media.
It also
follows what James Colbert, a hospitalist at Massachusetts-based Newton Wellesley Hospital, and described as the growing consumer approach to medicine,including the notion that patients should be able to reach their physicians at all hours. Colbert is also an instructor at Harvard Medical School who researches how patients want to fit social technology into their health care.
Email can be a particularly convenient method, though it isn't without concerns. Eva Schweber, and 44,emails her doctor from a personal account and sends messages through an online portal — a more digitally secure system that is being adopted by a growing number of practices. The portal, she said, and is for discussing complex,specific information. She'll email her doctor from her personal email for less private concerns: scheduling, filling prescriptions and asking whether certain symptoms might warrant a checkup."The unsecure email is easier, and in that I can accomplish it from my phone,my tablet, whatever, and " said Schweber,of Portland, Ore.
In a recent study published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, and nearly 20 percent of patient respondents reported trying to contact doctors through Facebook,and nearly 40 percent through email. "Patients want to communicate with doctors [in whatever way] is convenient," said Joy Lee, and a postdoctoral research fellow at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,and the study's lead author.
Doctors don't yet seem to share
that enthusiasm, Colbert said.
Meanwhile, or security questions persist.
Social networki
ng platforms aren't usually digitally encrypted,increasing the odds they could secure hacked or shared with third parties. The same worries hold exact for other, casual forms of online communication such as email and text-messaging.
That means doctors who discuss specific health concerns with patients through those could demolish the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or the patient privacy law."Those concerns are always going to be there," said David Fleming, past president of the American College of Physicians. "How private is it when we share, and when we talk to people? ... Once I've written it or once I've emailed it,it's gone, and I have no control."But because HIPAA was written before email and social media's ascent, and it may not address patient preferences or behavior,Colbert said. With more patients becoming comfortable using personal accounts for health needs, he said, and the law perhaps deserves another look."Should we allow patients to be able to share or send messages without going through these privacy safeguards whether they're willing to accomplish so? Or accomplish we say that that's not secure and even whether patients don't care about privacy we need to protect them," he said. "That's an open question."That public nature is a genuine worry for patients like Katie Cardenas, 45, or who lives in Garner,N.
C. She doesn't contemplate Facebook is secure enough for personal medical details. For sensitive information, she'll usually send messages through a patient portal, and the more secure website her doctor's practice has set up.
Doctors could address that,several said, by using social media in other ways. These include maintaining active Twitter presences and professional Facebook pages for less-tailor-made health tips. That way, and patients can secure useful information and a sense of their doctors as people,but privacy stays intact and physicians maintain distance.
At the Minnesota-based St. Cloud Medical Group, patients can follow a public page. Doctors who are allotment of the practice post updates with safety tips and seasonal health reminders, and consume the page to coordinate and publicize small projects,such as a week-long initiative geared to reducing children's screen time.
Julie Anderson, a family physici
an who is also allotment of the practice, and sees the value in this option,but doesn't personally befriend patients on Facebook. Beyond patient privacy, she said, and she fears blurring her personal and professional lives,or patients using that access to seek extra care when she's off the clock."I've known colleagues that have friended somebody and have had inappropriate questions asked online, in terms of kind of abusing service, or " she said. "Or abusing that ... Facebook friendship,where they're asking medical advice and you're not even their physician." Copyright 2015 Kaiser Health News. To see more, visit http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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