Advances in Medical Education and Practice (Sep 2023)

How Physicians Tackle Internet-Misinformed Patients: Going Beyond Traditional Patient-Centered Communication – A Study Protocol

  • Lu Q,
  • Schulz PJ

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 983 – 988

Abstract

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Qianfeng Lu,1 Peter J Schulz1,2 1Faculty of Communication, Culture and Society, Università della Svizzera italiana (USI), Lugano, Switzerland; 2Department of Communication & Media, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, South KoreaCorrespondence: Peter J Schulz, Email [email protected]: The proliferation of misleading and irrelevant health information on the Internet has become a significant public concern. Inappropriate use of online materials can cause harm to patients’ health and quality of life. While close attention has been paid to health campaigns and education programs that aim to disseminate accurate health knowledge, the role of physicians, who directly communicate with patients in medical encounters and provide personalized information, has been overlooked. Therefore, this study focuses on physicians and their communication strategies with internet-misinformed patients (IMPs).Objective: This study aims to understand the communicative strategies physicians use to tackle IMPs and explore connections between physicians’ communicative strategies and patient-centered communication.Methods: Approximately 10 to 15 physicians from diverse cultural backgrounds, including Ticino (an Italian-speaking region in Switzerland), Milan and China will be interviewed. Interviews will be conducted in-person or online through video conferencing software programs. Physicians will be asked about their experiences with IMPs, communicative strategies for addressing patients’ misconceptions, balancing patient preferences, decision-making obstacles, and envisioning an ideal relationship with them. A thematic analysis will be utilized to analyze data, employing a general inductive approach.Discussion: The results will provide valuable insights into effective clinical communication strategies that address patients’ misuse of internet materials and inform policymakers and healthcare providers about the limitations and applicability of patient-centered communication in the current digital era.Keywords: misleading information, physician–patient relationship, patient-centered communication

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