Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey

BackgroundHealth care professionals (HCPs) routinely have questions concerning the medications they are recommending. There are numerous resources available; however, each has its own advantages and disadvantages. ObjectiveThe purpose of this survey was to gain kn...

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Main Authors: Evelyn R Hermes-DeSantis, Robert T Hunter, Julie Welch, Roma Bhavsar, Daniel Boulos, Marie-Ange Noue
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e25868
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spelling doaj-19896c7987c94da2b544d1a8ffc4675c2021-06-24T15:03:38ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712021-06-01236e2586810.2196/25868Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional SurveyEvelyn R Hermes-DeSantishttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5658-3899Robert T Hunterhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9064-3549Julie Welchhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7022-9201Roma Bhavsarhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6682-9063Daniel Bouloshttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0462-7260Marie-Ange Nouehttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-8582-1331 BackgroundHealth care professionals (HCPs) routinely have questions concerning the medications they are recommending. There are numerous resources available; however, each has its own advantages and disadvantages. ObjectiveThe purpose of this survey was to gain knowledge of the preferred methods and sources HCPs use to obtain information concerning medications. MethodsA total of 511 HCPs (202 physicians, 105 pharmacists, 100 advance practice nurses, 53 registered nurses, and 51 physician assistants) were surveyed through a third-party market research firm. All participants were practicing in the United States. Individuals working for a pharmaceutical company were excluded. The survey collected demographics, frequency of searching medical information, types of questions searched, sources of medical information, and rationale for preferred and nonpreferred sources of medical information. Use of medical information resources were rated on a 5-point ordinal scale. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics. ResultsOf the 511 respondents, 88.5% (452/511) searched for medical information either daily or several times per week. The most common questions involved dosing and administration, drug-drug interactions, adverse events and safety, clinical practice guidelines, and disease state information. The main rationale for using specific medical websites or apps and general online search engines frequently or very frequently was ease of use (medical websites or apps: 269/356, 75.6%; general online search engines: 248/284, 87.3%). Accuracy was the main rationale for frequent or very frequent use of medical literature search databases (163/245, 66.5%), prescribing labels or information (122/213, 57.3%), and professional literature (120/195, 61.5%). The main reason for rarely or never using specific medical websites or apps and medical literature search databases was unfamiliarity (medical websites or apps: 16/48, 33%; medical literature search databases: 35/78, 45%); for general online search engines, inaccuracy (34/54, 63%); and for prescribing labels or information and professional literature, excessive time (prescribing labels or information : 54/102, 52.9%; professional literature: 66/106, 62.3%). The pharmaceutical company was sometimes used as a resource for medical information. When the medical information department was used, the call center and the website were considered thorough and complete (call center: 14/25, 56%; website: 33/55, 60%). However, the rationale for not using the call center was the time required (199/346, 57.5%) and the website being unfamiliar (129/267, 48.3%). ConclusionsThe driving forces in the selection of resources are accuracy and ease of use. There is an opportunity to increase awareness of all the appropriate resources for HCPs which may aid in their daily clinical decisions. Specifically, pharmaceutical company medical information departments can help fulfill this need by addressing two major challenges with use of the pharmaceutical company: lack of awareness of medical information services and the speed at which responses are disseminated. Overall, there is lack of understanding or appreciation of the range of pathways to obtain published information and knowledge from pharmaceutical company medical information services. Among the many challenges resource champions will face are the ability to effectively make resources and their platforms accessible, known, and useful to the scientific community.https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e25868
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evelyn R Hermes-DeSantis
Robert T Hunter
Julie Welch
Roma Bhavsar
Daniel Boulos
Marie-Ange Noue
spellingShingle Evelyn R Hermes-DeSantis
Robert T Hunter
Julie Welch
Roma Bhavsar
Daniel Boulos
Marie-Ange Noue
Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Evelyn R Hermes-DeSantis
Robert T Hunter
Julie Welch
Roma Bhavsar
Daniel Boulos
Marie-Ange Noue
author_sort Evelyn R Hermes-DeSantis
title Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
title_short Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
title_full Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
title_fullStr Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
title_full_unstemmed Preferences for Accessing Medical Information in the Digital Age: Health Care Professional Survey
title_sort preferences for accessing medical information in the digital age: health care professional survey
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2021-06-01
description BackgroundHealth care professionals (HCPs) routinely have questions concerning the medications they are recommending. There are numerous resources available; however, each has its own advantages and disadvantages. ObjectiveThe purpose of this survey was to gain knowledge of the preferred methods and sources HCPs use to obtain information concerning medications. MethodsA total of 511 HCPs (202 physicians, 105 pharmacists, 100 advance practice nurses, 53 registered nurses, and 51 physician assistants) were surveyed through a third-party market research firm. All participants were practicing in the United States. Individuals working for a pharmaceutical company were excluded. The survey collected demographics, frequency of searching medical information, types of questions searched, sources of medical information, and rationale for preferred and nonpreferred sources of medical information. Use of medical information resources were rated on a 5-point ordinal scale. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics. ResultsOf the 511 respondents, 88.5% (452/511) searched for medical information either daily or several times per week. The most common questions involved dosing and administration, drug-drug interactions, adverse events and safety, clinical practice guidelines, and disease state information. The main rationale for using specific medical websites or apps and general online search engines frequently or very frequently was ease of use (medical websites or apps: 269/356, 75.6%; general online search engines: 248/284, 87.3%). Accuracy was the main rationale for frequent or very frequent use of medical literature search databases (163/245, 66.5%), prescribing labels or information (122/213, 57.3%), and professional literature (120/195, 61.5%). The main reason for rarely or never using specific medical websites or apps and medical literature search databases was unfamiliarity (medical websites or apps: 16/48, 33%; medical literature search databases: 35/78, 45%); for general online search engines, inaccuracy (34/54, 63%); and for prescribing labels or information and professional literature, excessive time (prescribing labels or information : 54/102, 52.9%; professional literature: 66/106, 62.3%). The pharmaceutical company was sometimes used as a resource for medical information. When the medical information department was used, the call center and the website were considered thorough and complete (call center: 14/25, 56%; website: 33/55, 60%). However, the rationale for not using the call center was the time required (199/346, 57.5%) and the website being unfamiliar (129/267, 48.3%). ConclusionsThe driving forces in the selection of resources are accuracy and ease of use. There is an opportunity to increase awareness of all the appropriate resources for HCPs which may aid in their daily clinical decisions. Specifically, pharmaceutical company medical information departments can help fulfill this need by addressing two major challenges with use of the pharmaceutical company: lack of awareness of medical information services and the speed at which responses are disseminated. Overall, there is lack of understanding or appreciation of the range of pathways to obtain published information and knowledge from pharmaceutical company medical information services. Among the many challenges resource champions will face are the ability to effectively make resources and their platforms accessible, known, and useful to the scientific community.
url https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e25868
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