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Medicolegal and Ethical Aspects of E-Mail

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Most 'e-patients' are professionals under the age of 45 and both men and women ... A patient with a heart condition may be given the anti-impotence drug Viagra ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medicolegal and Ethical Aspects of E-Mail


1
Medicolegal and Ethical Aspects of E-Mail and
Internet Communication Between Patient and
Healthcare Provider Benedict Stanberry, LLB LLM
MRIN Director, Centre for Law Ethics and Risk in
Telemedicine
2
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3
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4
Treating Patients by E-Mail
  • Prescriptions are posted to the patient or the
    patients pharmacy is contacted directly
  • British Medical Association want a ban on
    prescribing drugs over the Internet
  • Dr. Julian Eden (below) is the first doctor in
    the UK to offer both diagnosis and prescriptions
    over the Internet
  • Most e-patients are professionals under the age
    of 45 and both men and women are using the
    service over 600 have already signed up
  • Initial subscription fee, followed by 15.00
    charge per consultation
  • Patients may be asked to come in for a
    face-to-face consultation

5
What are the Benefits?
  • E-mail contains a permanent record of the
    doctor-patient encounter
  • Doctor still has the option to ask a patient to
    come in for a face-to-face consultation
  • Health advice may be available at any hour of the
    day or night
  • Gives patients fast and easy access to health
    advice

6
What are the Dangers?
  • E-mail may be insecure and may be retrieved from
    a central system long after it has been deleted
    from the senders / recipients system
  • E-mail can be forwarded to unintended or unknown
    recipients
  • You may not be able to ascertain sufficient
    detail about a patients condition simply by an
    exchange of e-mail
  • There are presently no regulations to protect
    patients
  • Patients could find that they are being treated
    by bogus doctors with little or no
    qualifications, or by doctors who have actually
    been struck-off
  • These services are only available to paying
    patients

7
On-line Prescribing
  • Foreign on-line pharmacies may be selling drugs
    that are unapproved or have been banned in other
    countries
  • Patients G.P. is not involved so there is no
    opportunity to advise against drugs that may be
    unsuitable for the patient, have adverse
    contraindications or dangerous interactions with
    other drugs.
  • Currently only available for private
    prescriptions and a paper copy must be provided
  • Patients may use the service to obtain drugs that
    they do not need or to obtain illegal drugs
  • US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has made 43
    arrests and has obtained 22 criminal convictions
    for selling medicines without a valid
    prescription over the Internet
  • On-line pharmacies may be unregistered and
    unsupervised (and therefore illegal)

8
What are the Dangers?
  • For example
  • A patient with a heart condition may be given the
    anti-impotence drug Viagra
  • A slimming drug may be prescribed to someone
    without getting adequate details of his diet
    history

9
The Issues
  • E-mail and the Internet are reconfiguring contact
    by patients with their physician in a way that
    the telephone never did  
  • The telephone dramatically altered medical
    consultations but had never threatened to replace
    a face-to-face consultation in the way that
    e-mail does  
  • Some doctors have begun using e-mail to
    communicate with patients, health payors and
    colleagues. A very small minority of doctors have
    created informational or interactive websites and
    there are a handful of centres offering
    international access to specialised care  
  • Patient demand for electronic contact with their
    health care practitioner is growing

10
Electronic communication as a medical record
  • Any document about a healthcare interaction
    usually becomes a part of a patients permanent
    medical record  
  • Likewise, all communication that is generated by
    or about the patient, including any photographs
    or images, is part of the medical record  
  • The law requires the retention of these
    materials  
  • A failure to preserve them may constitute
    malpractice

11
Authorship
  • In the past no element of the patient record has
    ever been written by the patient symptoms
    described verbally by the patient have usually
    been objectively and passively turned into
    objective facts about the patients symptoms.
    By isolating certain facts from the patients
    narrative the health care provider has been able
    to focus their attention on potential diagnostic
    clues.

12
Authorship
  • Patient may have the right to require that
    e-mails are treated as being especially sensitive
    information (just as they may ask the doctor with
    whom they are face-to-face not to record certain
    information they give him to go off the
    record) 
  • E-mail is both the medical decision-making
    process at work AND the record of those medical
    encounters 

13
Authorship
  • Case narrative is tolerated grudgingly because
    it enables clinicians to describe the nonlinear,
    subjective, and uncertain aspects of their
    experimental field. But, as the professions
    prohibition against anecdotes recognises,
    narrative that bursts the generic constraints of
    the strict case history, especially narrative of
    any length and fullness or speculative force,
    inevitably pulls against medicines commitment to
    the objective, scientific study of human illness.
    The medical case history is, after all, a
    history a narrative that attempts both to
    control the subjectivity of the observer-narrator
    and to stabilize and evaluate the encapsulated
    narrative of the patient who is its object.
  • - Kathryn Montgomery Hunter, Doctors Stories
    The Narrative
  • Structure of Medical Knowledge (1991)

14
Authorship
  • With e-mails, patients own words will appear in
    the medical record 
  • There will be a full transcript of the encounter
    but these e-mail communications will no longer
    be prescreened or medically relevant
    material  
  • E-mails should be maintained in the patients
    medical record like any other relevant
    document 
  • Privacy of such elements of the healthcare record
    must still be maintained 

15
Solutions to problems of Authorship
  • Maintain clinical e-mails in a separate, private
    section of the medical record which is not
    available to all known and authorised users of
    the medical record
  • Be aware that some patient e-mails may be too
    sensitive and personal for inclusion in the full
    record, and that sharing them with colleagues may
    require the full, express consent of the patient

16
Malpractice
  • According to the UK General Medical Councils
    Handbook Good Medical Practice (available at
    http//www.gmc-uk.org)
  • The use of phone or e-mail should not diminish
    the quality of healthcare consultations and
    prescribing by such means may seriously
    compromise standards of care where the patient is
    not previously known to the doctor, no
    examination can be provided and there is little
    or no provision for appropriate monitoring of the
    patient and follow-up care".

17
Malpractice
  • The German Code of Conduct for Medical
    Practitioners (100. Ärztliche Muster-Berufsordnung
    ) states that
  • Accordingly, the medical practitioner is
    prohibited to treat a patient, in particular to
    advise a patient, solely through mail,
    newspapers, communications technology means or
    computer networks. He is simply permitted to
    publish information in print media or on the
    Internet if such information is limited to
    generalities about diagnostic or therapeutic
    measures that the medical practitioner uses.

18
Other issues.
  • Reimbursement e-mail consultations are unlikely
    to be indemnified for the time being
  • Licensing risk of violating licensing laws when
    engaging in consultation, diagnosis or treatment
    in the distant state  
  • Jurisdiction even in cyberspace, physician and
    patient location will likely determine legal
    jurisdiction
  • Duty of care how far does an e-mail dialogue
    with an unknown patient have to go before a
    doctor-patient relationship is established?
  • Standard of care still emerging but explicit
    guidance urgently required 
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