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首页> 外文期刊>The California Journal of Emergency Medicine >What Did You Google? Describing Online Health Information Search Patterns of ED patients and Their Relationship with Final Diagnoses
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What Did You Google? Describing Online Health Information Search Patterns of ED patients and Their Relationship with Final Diagnoses

机译:您使用Google做了什么?描述ED患者的在线健康信息搜索模式及其与最终诊断的关系

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Introduction: Emergency department (ED) patients’ Internet search terms prior to arrival have notbeen well characterized. The objective of this analysis was to characterize the Internet search termspatients used prior to ED arrival and their relationship to final diagnoses. Methods: We collected data via survey; participants listed Internet search terms used. Terms wereclassified into categories: symptom, specific diagnosis, treatment options, anatomy questions,processes of care/physicians, or “other.” We categorized each discharge diagnosis as either symptombasedor formal diagnosis. The relationship between the search term and final diagnosis was assignedto one of four categories of search/diagnosis combinations (symptom search/symptom diagnosis,symptom search/formal diagnosis, diagnosis search/symptom diagnosis, diagnosis search/formaldiagnosis), representing different “trajectories.” Results : We approached 889 patients; 723 (81.3%) participated. Of these, 177 (24.5%) used theInternet prior to ED presentation; however, seven had incomplete data (N=170). Mean age was 47years (standard deviation 18.2); 58.6% were female and 65.7% white. We found that 61.7% searchedsymptoms and 40.6% searched a specific diagnosis. Most patients received discharge diagnoses ofequal specificity as their search terms (34% flat trajectory-symptoms and 34% flat trajectory-diagnosis).Ten percent searched for a diagnosis by name but received a symptom-based discharge diagnosiswith less specificity. In contrast, 22% searched for a symptom and received a detailed diagnosis.Among those who searched for a diagnosis by name (n=69) only 29% received the diagnosis that theyhad searched. Conclusion : The majority of patients used symptoms as the basis of their pre-ED presentation Internetsearch. When patients did search for specific diagnoses, only a minority searched for the diagnosisthey eventually received. [West J Emerg Med. 2017;18(5)928-936.]
机译:简介:急诊科(ED)患者在到达之前的互联网搜索条件尚未很好地描述。该分析的目的是表征患者在ED到来之前使用的互联网搜索术语及其与最终诊断的关系。方法:我们通过调查收集数据;参与者列出了使用的Internet搜索术语。术语分为以下几类:症状,特定诊断,治疗选择,解剖问题,护理/内科医生的过程或“其他”。我们将每种出院诊断归为基于症状或形式的诊断。搜索项与最终诊断之间的关系被分配给四种搜索/诊断组合(症状搜索/症状诊断,症状搜索/形式诊断,诊断搜索/症状诊断,诊断搜索/形式诊断)中的一种,代表不同的轨迹。 ”结果:我们共治疗了889例患者。 723(81.3%)人参加了。其中有177(24.5%)人在ED演示之前使用了互联网;但是,有七个数据不完整(N = 170)。平均年龄为47岁(标准差为18.2);女性为58.6%,白人为65.7%。我们发现61.7%的症状搜寻和40.6%的症状搜寻。大多数患者接受出院诊断与他们的检索词具有相同的特异性(34%的扁平轨迹症状和34%的扁平轨迹诊断)。百分之十的人通过姓名搜索诊断,但接受了基于症状的出院诊断,但特异性较低。相比之下,有22%的人搜索症状并获得详细的诊断;在按名称搜索诊断的人中(n = 69),只有29%的人接受了他们曾经搜索过的诊断。结论:大多数患者以症状为基础进行ED前互联网研究。当患者确实寻找具体诊断时,只有少数人最终获得了诊断。 [西急救医学杂志。 2017; 18(5)928-936。]

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