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Medicine The Internet

Microsoft Researchers Study "Cyberchondria" 144

Slatterz introduces us to the first major study on "cyberchondria" by Microsoft researchers (abstract, paper [PDF]). The news that it can be a bad idea to search the Internet to see if you have a terrible disease should come as no surprise. According to the NYTimes article, the syndrome has been known as "cyberchondria" since at least the year 2000 (we discussed it a few years back). It refers to increased anxiety brought on when people with little or no medical training go searching for answers to common medical complaints on the Web. The article compares cyberchondria with a phenomenon well known among second-year medical students, called "medical schoolitis." The researchers note that Web searchers' propensity to jump to awful conclusions is "basic human behavior that has been noted by research scientists for decades."
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Microsoft Researchers Study "Cyberchondria"

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  • I would disagree (Score:5, Interesting)

    by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @02:50PM (#25917637) Journal

    The researchers note that Web searchers' propensity to jump to awful conclusions is "basic human behavior that has been noted by research scientists for decades."

    In my anecdotal and limited experience, I've noticed that it is certain personality types which have a "propensity to jump to awful conclusions".

    They basically resort to hysterics over things they cannot control, even before they know how [thing] is going to end.

  • by ashdamle ( 1419349 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @02:50PM (#25917649)
    We (myself and a couple of doctors) started MEDgle (http://www.medgle.com/ [medgle.com] ) specifically to help people understand the possible causes for their symptoms. Hopefully this will help combat cyberchondria by giving people reasonable causes, not the most dire. And as you stated, people should always talk with their health care provider. Any feedback is much appreciated. Cheers
  • Personal experience (Score:3, Interesting)

    by bsDaemon ( 87307 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @03:08PM (#25917779)

    A few years ago, I woke up with a terrible pain in my lower abdomen. I did a quick Google search and matched all the symptoms of appendicitis, so I got my parents to take me to the hospital.

    The first doctor also thought that I had it and scheduled me for surgery. However, the surgeon said to wait for a while.

    Turns out that it wasn't appendicitis and that I just had to fart really, really, really badly. Of course, 24hrs in the hospital to figure it out probably makes it the most expensive fart ever -- something around $5,000.

    So yes, this "cyberchondria" really is a problem.

  • by girlintraining ( 1395911 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @03:09PM (#25917787)

    I seem to recall sometime in about 2000 there was a report that a computer program had been designed that asked a series of questions and provided a most likely diagnosis. It was apparently better at doing this than the doctors were by a small margin. The project was axed though after a huge outcry that it would put doctors out of business, couldn't be trusted because it couldn't be medically licensed, liability issues, etc. Has anything changed since then?

    It seems like a good idea -- people punching in their symptoms and getting an answer about whether to take a trip to the ER (perhaps printout in hand) or not, and with people spending hours in waiting rooms only to find out they have the common cold or just bad menstral cramps, doesn't it make sense to give people the option of entering all their data into a computer first? If we tied such a database into the admissions system, they could show up with all their insurance, contact information, and symptoms list already available for the triage nurse. I'm not advocating taking a person and their clinical experience out of the loop, but certainly there's ways to use medical data to do better targeting. I've felt the same way about pharmaceuticals and wondered why there isn't a database to track adverse reactions to drugs on a per-patient basis... If someone's tried three different anti-depressants and had a poor response to them, maybe that particular reaction projects that Drug X would be 60% more likely to be effective than Drug Y. As it is, it's often drug rhoulette(sp?) until you find one that works.

     

  • by peter303 ( 12292 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @03:18PM (#25917853)
    The condition is common in med students who seem to get sick with whatever conditions they've recently studied.
  • Re:Conclusion... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by westlake ( 615356 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @03:31PM (#25917961)
    I'm sure the study concludes that it's a great idea to search the Internet to see if you have a terrible disease using Windows Live Search.

    What the study actually found, of course, is that you are far better off using a search engine that links only to known-good sources for public health information.

    The AMA. The American Cancer Society. The Center for Disease Control.

    The geek shouldn't shrug off studies like these because they expose a serious problem with a general search engine like Google - and a search service that has perhaps become too much a marketing machine.

  • by syousef ( 465911 ) on Friday November 28, 2008 @04:27PM (#25918349) Journal

    If you conclude the worst, and you have the disease you might go and seek medical help sooner. If it turns out you're right, you might catch your disease in time to have something about it.

    The other thing to note is that good medical care, even in the "developed" world is increasingly becoming hard to find. Doctors do long hours and are under immense pressure and the best and brightest sren't always attracted to the field, and when they are they often feel entitled to gouge the people they treat while providing sub-standard care. That's not to say there are no good doctors, just that there are surprisingly few. A good doctor will save you but a bad one will get you killed.

    I've had friends and loved ones prescribed medications that almost killed them (and had dosage increased by 3 separate doctors in one case, as one of the contraindications got worse and worse!). I've seen routine things completely misdiagnosed. I've seen a woman with maternal asthma barely able to breath and hacking up huge amounts of flem dismissed as a fat hypochondriac. I've seen shoulder dislocations misdiagnosed as swelling - something that commonly happens resulting in long term should instability. (Don't believe me? Check out the literature on posterior shoulder dislocations and include "avoiding a missed diagnosis" in your search).

    I've also been told I should have my ankle fused by 2 specialists. According to them I should no longer be walking, but when I looked up the long term prospects - after 3 months off my feet completely only a 70-80% chance of success (in which case repeat once then chop off foot) I can expect a couple of years recovering and about 6-7 years before severe ankle arthritis hits. I have gone for more conservative treatment - staying off the ankle - and while there is still pain I walk a couple of kilometers a day and haven't had to sacrifice my career. I may still have to have the surgery but these surgeons didn't even suggest TRYING anything conservative.

    IF you use the internet appropriately instead of looking up ever sneeze and cough and assumign you are dying, the net is a wonderful thing. Anyone who says otherwise has a vested interest in keeping the information from you.

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