People are growing their health-consumer muscles in 2013 | Health Populi
People are growing their health-consumer muscles in 2013 | Health Populi.
From the 31 July 2013 article at HealthPopuli
Most Americans are concerned about their ability to for medical bills, even when they have health insurance. As a result, most are comfortable asking their doctor about how much their medical treatment will cost. People are becoming savvier health care shoppers largely because they have to: 37% of people in the U.S. have an annual health insurance deductible over $2,000, according to the Spring/Summer 2013 Altarum Institute Survey of Consumer Health Care Opinion, published on 11th July 2013.
Many of the media stories coming out of the Altarum survey since its publication have been about people and their trust in doctors – or lack thereof.
But the other side of this coin is growing patient/consumer health empowerment.
It appears that people feel competent to take on a greater role in shared decision making, self-diagnosis or assessment of symptoms, and information collecting on conditions – even before seeing the doctor. Take a look at the table, which illustrates that most do “health homework” before going to see their doctor.
Altarum polled a survey sample of 2,357 U.S. consumers in May, 2013.
Health Populi’s Hot Points: The internet has truly become a go-to source for people and their health, every day. I grew up with a thick tome of a health guide on my parents’ living room bookshelf – I remember a dog-eared Mayo Clinic Guide to Health, as well as a Merck Manual my mom picked up from a library sale in the early 1970s and her nutrition bible, Adelle Davis’ Let’s Get Well.
Today’s 5-inch-thick guide to health isn’t a book at all; it’s WebMD, NIH.gov, FDA.gov, Yahoo! health groups, WEGO Health, PatientsLikeMe, CureTogether, DiabetesMine, TuDiabetes, Migraine.com – and to be sure, Paging Dr. Google. And, it’s also friends and neighbors, whose opinions 75% of Americans trust to choose a doctor – more than online rates on a doc’s bedside manner, office waiting times, or objective information on clinical quality, according to Altarum’s poll.
What Altarum finds is that people are preparing in advance of their doctor’s appointments – preparing questions, which means spending time thinking through symptoms, family histories, observations of daily living, and other factors that may feed into an acute situation or a question about how to stay well, fit, and out of the health system.
Related Resources
- Choosing Quality Care (AHRQ)
- MedlinePlus (NIH)
- FamilyDoctor.org
- Evaluating Health Information (jflahiff.wordpress.com)
Related articles
- Why is the health consumer always wrong? (doctorsbag.wordpress.com)
- Consumer Health Websites Could Be Sharing Your Personal Data With Third Parties (medicaldaily.com)
- Women Are Key to Improved Health Coverage, Say Health Advocates (publicnewsservice.org)