Title: Consumer eHealth: Health Beliefs
1Consumer e-Health Health Beliefs
- The public wants to believe in medicine and the
power of science - Doctor is still considered the most prestigious
of 17 professions (Harris Poll, 8/2000), followed
by scientists and teachers - When asked to attribute future deaths, most
polled (Harris 1/2000) exaggerated deaths caused
by violence and accidents, overestimated progress
in prostate and breast cancer, underestimated
progress in cardiovascular disease - Demonstrating limited knowledge of relative
health risks
2Consumer e-Health Ethics for Marketers
- ESOMAR researchers basic responsibilities
- Avoid raising unfounded hopes, misleading in
terms of product safety, encouraging public to
ask practitioner for specific prescription - The lack of privacy rules on the Web is the
number one barrier to people getting better
health care information, because theyre afraid.
Janlori Goldman, Georgetown - Since marketings core function is creating
mutually beneficial exchanges, responsible health
care marketers minimize barriers to appropriate
information and care seeking - Research can point the way
3Consumer e-Health The Law
- HIPAA (1996) set EDI standards for providers,
payors and government final privacy standards in
development see http//aspe.os.dhhs.gov/admnsimp/
for updates - Draft regulations posted November 1999
identifiable info release requires patient
consent, patients can view and correct records,
training of data workers required, some
accounting of disclosures audit trail re who saw
what data - Scope includes data that would have to be
combined with other data to identify an
individual - Compliance cant be mandated till at least 2002
4Consumer e-Health The Law (contd)
- Currently, proposed HIPAA regulations exempt
disease management some privacy groups object - Perception that disease mgt firms sell names to
pharma however, Disease Mgt Assoc of America
supports firewalls, ban on revealing
pt-identifiable info - Note If exemption lifted, health plans and their
agents would be unable to use own data to locate
and notify members of disease mgt program options - DMAA data opt out rate from disease mgt
programs, once enrolled, only 4 perceived
control of disease, not privacy, generally cited
5Consumer e-Health The Law (contd)
- Various online privacy legislation proposed at
Federal level much has occurred via private
agreement - July 2000 agreement between Network Advertising
Initiative (including DoubleClick and
MatchLogic), Dept. of Commerce and FTC provides
for robust notice and opt-out choice if sites
collect personally-identifiable medical or
financial information, monitor Web site use,
merge on and off-line data - However, still a negative option approach,
doesnt define sensitive, doesnt apply to
non-advertisers (e.g. marketing vendors)
6Consumer e-Health The Law (contd)
- Legislative proposals under consideration
prohibit certain uses of information, allow
cookie downloads by invitation only, mandate
opt-in before information can be collated/used
require notice of information use on sites - 1998 FTC core elements notice to individual,
choice about revealing information, access to
information already collected, enforcement of
privacy standards with penalties - Privacy groups pushing for more than negative
options consumers would in essence be forced to
acknowledge information collection and usage - In some ways, preserving privacy would be more
intrusive than in direct mail
7Consumer e-Health The Law (contd)
- Pharmatrak places cookies on computers browsing
major pharma sites tracks every move, e.g.
downloads of info re disorders, without informing
users purportedly plans to link surfing with
individuals - Lawsuits pending, include State of Michigans
- Web browsers can notify users of attempted cookie
placement, allow refusal. However, many Web users
dont know this. - 10/4/2000 consensus statement from Internet
Healthcare Coalition, HON Foundation, Hi-Ethics
states plan to combine their three codes of
ethics this will become the Webs leading
health information standard
8Consumer e-Health Internet Self-Regulation
- medCertain, European Commission funded,
developing trustmark system for consumers to
link to site info - BrightStreet.com (Web users can modify their
profiles on its sites) - URAC (American Accreditation Health Care
Commission) pushing accreditation for health care
Web sites - TRUSTe (purportedly violated its own privacy seal
of approval guidelines by tracking users
movements via cookies and invisible images
without their consent) - Mail Abuse Prevention System, which blocked
Harris Interactives access to 2.7M of its panel
members due to disagreement over double opt-in
9Consumer e-Health Emergency Information
- Often, providers unaware of patients medical
history - In France and Germany, public carries smart
cards with encoded personal medical information - Americans often skeptical, afraid of card theft
- Numerous private ID schemes, e.g. medical alert
jewelry, Internet-accessible databases which are
updated periodically or on demand - Why does this matter?
- Less lopsided tradeoffs between data privacy and
better care inevitable over time
10Consumer e-Health Survey Recruitment
- Web site recruitment concern does the invitation
become the survey context? - Some vendors level the bandwidth playing field
by providing freestanding audio/video devices,
thus promoting greater representativeness among
their panels - Again, question whether the device assumes
greater importance than survey content, and how
this might influence responses - To what extent do these devices and the
survey-taking process, if frequent, influence
attitudes toward pharma, drugs, health, etc.
overall?
11Consumer e-Health Survey Design
- Privacy, security issues in consumer health more
top of mind than with health survey research - Due to media furor this could change any time
- Cookies controversial, not needed in many survey
applications - Java can freeze/crash computers, apps try to
minimize RAM used by scripts - Being on the bleeding edge leaves some of your
potential respondents to do the bleeding - Significant percentage of population still has
14.4 bps connections, non-Power PC chips
12Consumer e-Health Web Use Context
- LA Times One-third (35) of US Net users came
online only in the last year - Daily, consumers hear and read about questionable
Web user information use or resale - Recent news Amazon shares users prefs bankrupt
toy site peddles database TRUSTe, privacy seal
of approval vendor, tracked own users with
cookies, DoubleClick dropped plan to correlate
private data with Abacus Direct GeoCities rapped
by FDC for selling data, drkoop, WebMD planned to
link on and offline identifiers without
disclosure - Couple concern with lack of awareness as to
how/how much all this happens even intelligent
patterning may be seen as data privacy abuse
13Consumer e-Health Privacy Context
- Several schools of thought about privacy
- As with BtB marketing, targeted ads may be
considered less intrusive than broadcasts over
time do we wait it out? - Yet, brand equity could depreciate if online
behavior tracking considered overly invasive - When you think AOL, do you think targeted
marketing or junk (e)-mail? - October 3 AOL testifies to Senate panel against
opt-in as too cumbersome, one-size-fits-all - While privacy groups argue that opt-in is
standard in medicine, banking
14Consumer e-Health Privacy Checklist
- How are user ID and password linked to data?
- Who is aware of these links?
- How secure is transmission of user data?
- Do you sell or share user data at any level? Are
users aware of this? - Are data ever reported other than in the
aggregate? - Do you download temporary or permanent cookies?
What do they track? Did the user agree? - What sites are linked to yours? What are their
data privacy policies?
15Consumer e-Health Privacy Viewpoints
- Internet users want the Golden Rule of the
Internet to be Dont do anything unto me unless
I give you permission. Lee Rainie, Pew
Internet Survey Project - In Pew study, (5-6/2000) 56 of users could not
define cookies, which track about 90 of Web
shopping - Only one-fourth (27) of respondents bought
target marketing argument for Web use tracking
54 said opt out is privacy invasion 86 favor
opt in - Yet 54 have exchanged personal information for
content, and another 10 said they would - Another 27, however, would never give personal
information to a Web site
16Consumer e-Health Privacy vs. Usage
- In Pew study, one-third (36) reported seeking
online support for health, family and mental
health issues, via support groups or specific
disorder information, with one-fourth (24) of
those signing in with their real name and e-mail
address - Users still afraid over half (54) worry re
downloading a virus one-third fear that someone
will know what sites they visit - Harris Interactive study, summer 2000 only about
half those registering at a a health site sought
its privacy statement - One-fifth of those polled had provided personal
data, yet over 80 found it difficult to
identify the sponsors or funders of specific
sites
17Consumer e-Health Privacy vs. Usage (contd)
- More Pew findings 84 are concerned that
businesses and/or strangers are acquiring
personal information 81 want rules about
online activity tracking - 24 of respondents reported lying to protect
their privacy on a site 10 have blocked cookies
on their computers, 9 encrypted e-mail, 5 used
software aliases - 25 report having had a computer virus 25 have
made an online only friend 26 have responded to
a strangers e-mail 48 had bought something
online
18Consumer e-Health Information Seekers Privacy
Concerns
- LaurusHealth.com study (1/2000) 57 more
likely to use Web site guaranteeing personal
information wont be shared or sold 70 were
unaware that personal health info is shared or
sold to third parties thus research itself is
adding to skepticism - Jupiter less than 20 of consumers interested
in sharing any personal information with
pharmaceutical sites - CyberDialogue of 37M Net users not accessing
health information, 1/6 reticent due to privacy
and/or security - Found most trust in physicians, medical
institutes and associations ability to maintain
privacy of data - Least trust in pharma companies, Web portals and
online drugstores
19Consumer e-Health Information Seekers Privacy
Concerns (contd)
- Are these suspicions founded? Often, yes
- California HealthCare Foundation findings
DrKoop.com sold e-mail addresses, contrary to its
policy - Has since severed relationship with DoubleClick
- More to come, e.g. WebMD acquisition of OnHealth
databases raises questions - Scripts overlay banner ads at many sites subtle
redirects from banner host to banner sponsor - Forms submission data can go to banner ad
sponsors if code imprecise
20Consumer e-Health Use of the Web
- PC Data (9/2000) study 60 of Internet users
have visited a health/medical site in the last
year - 68 of those knowing their insurer has a site had
visited it - 58 of those visiting health sites used Web
information to self-diagnose, get up to speed
before consulting provider, 56 for general
medical info, 43 for wellness/fitness, 42 for
prescription info - Much less interest in finding doctors (15) or
hospitals (8) than in medical information only
20 had visited a hospital site
21Consumer e-Health Use of the Web (contd)
- Two-thirds expected to spend the same amount of
time on medical sites in the future the rest
were evenly divided between more or less time - WebMD, Drkoop and discoverhealth most- recognized
U.S. health sites - Pew cumulative data In any given day, 52 of
those with Internet access go on line 10 of
these seek health or medical information - Gomez 73 of Net users surveyed had accessed
health infostill younger, tech-savvy, but gap
narrowing
22Consumer e-Health Use of the Web (contd)
- Contrary to some HCPs perceptions, most PC Data
respondents seemed to see the Web in context - 71 of respondents agreed that Web sites are no
substitute for a physician, but 64 thought the
Web helpful in determining if they should see a
doctor - A third (35) specified the Web as the first
place to go for medical answers
23Consumer e-Health Information Quality
- Harris Interactive study of 1,000 consumers
almost as many (65) very confident of Web
information from sufferers as from HCPs (73) - Correspondingly, 56 say essential to use lay
language, only 39 essential that a physician
validates information - PC Data survey of respondents who have visited
chat rooms for health information, half (5 of
total sample) found very useful information - 30 sought alternative medicine info
24Consumer e-Health Information Quality (contd)
- Web users validate online health information by
- Conducting multiple searches
- Visiting multiple sites
- Asking provider(s) to validate information
- About half of Harris respondents felt health Web
sites should self-regulate information quality, a
third that individuals using sites should judge
only 14-16 of users or site developers wanted
government to step in
25Consumer e-Health Providers Watch Do They
Learn?
- Most popular site features? Health risk
assessment, calculators, how-tos, e.g.
exercise videos - Points to the thirst for answers, confirmation
- HCPs argue vastly oversimplified, misleading,
want complementary off and online information,
not confusion and contradictions - Sign of the times Medscape, other portals
feature what your patients are reading section
26Consumer e-Health Providers Lag Portals
- Computer Sciences Corp study 57 of 312 provider
system sites were static, 41 lacked links, 40
lacked any health info! - Some pharmas, e.g. Schering-Plough, as well as
AMA (Medem) creating physician Web sites, pushing
directory model, but most physician sites lack
complementary links
27Consumer e-Health Online Pharmacies
- Widely publicized federal crackdowns on point
and click self-prescribing Federation of State
Medical Boards has charged State boards with
developing guidelines for online scripts is
actively ordering from suspect Web sites and
tracing physicians - Four states have filed indictments charges
include money laundering, mail fraud, obstruction
of justice - Among nonusers, scant knowledge base of reputable
online pharmacies and their actual policies (e.g.
PlanetRx free shipping for scripts and anything
else ordered at same time )
28Consumer e-Health Online Pharmacies (contd)
- PC Data study 7 online pharmacy use only 11
of sample expected online pharmacy use to
increase - Reasons for using online pharmacies avoid waits
in line (52), prefer scripts sent to home (43).
One-third (36) say prices better online - But offline shoppers say its more convenient,
want to speak with pharmacist, not pay shipping
costs or wait for delivery - PlanetRx, CVS, drugstore.com, Walgreens most
well-known online pharmacies
29Consumer e-Health Beware the Biased Study
- Many misleading studies/results Deloitte
Touche claims 34 would pay extra to manage
benefits on line, 25 would switch plans,
physicians, pay more for online communication - Social bias Im a sophisticated, hands-on
consumer, right? - Argues for on and offline education, expectation
management - Harris 77 of online women would communicate
privately online with doc half of these would
pay more for the privilege same caveats apply
30Consumer e-Health Beware the Oversimplification
- CyberDialogue 75 of adults believe that people
should take more responsibility for their own
healthnot a yes/no question! - We can make some lifestyle decisions, care
seeking, provider selection, treatment choices
(unclear which of these carried more weight in
the above question) - But cant control genetics, family history,
environmental carcinogens, accidents, etc. - Core aspect of health care marketing is
understanding what people think they can/want to
control, how they think they can/want to control
it
31Consumer e-Health Beware the Glitzy Label
- Harris Poll (5-6/2000)calls 98M adults, or 86 of
Net users cyberchondriacs, i.e. they seek
Web-based health information, noting we did not
intend to be pejorative - Whatever its intent, this term oversimplifies and
denigrates the information-seeking process,
hardly monopolized by hypochondriacs - Pharma marketers can ill afford to dismiss online
health information seekers as high-strung and/or
ignorant - By Harris numbers, 86 x 56 (its percentage for
online access) 48 of U.S. adults already in
the e-health information market
32Consumer e-Health Whos Not on the Net?
- Pew studies Half of U.S. adults
- 32 of whom definitely will not go online, due
to perceived danger, expense, confusion, and
feeling that they are not missing anything (yet) - One-tenth of those off line are dropouts, due
to lack of hardware, new job, expense, interest
8 of dropouts cite privacy concerns - Intriguingly, non-users are less networked
offline 20 say they have no one or hardly
anyone to turn to for help are more suspicious
that someone will try to take advantage of them - Non-users are less educated, older, and more
likely than users to have minority ethnic
backgrounds
33Consumer e-Health Powerful Partnerships
- Dearth of relevant information at provider sites
Scottsdale Institute study of 213 organizations
found few with e-health strategy - Barriers include corporate politics, ROI concerns
- Lack of organizational progress may slow patient,
HCP uptake of new technologies - Technology offers opportunities for greater
industry integration with consumer health
players, facilitating public understanding of
pharma issues
34Consumer e-Health Wheres my Data?
- Many proposals, staved off due to national
satisfaction with personal provider and care, to
socialize care and fix drug prices - Studies confirm consumers dont want government
to run the Webor health care - Intellectually, we know personal data are
everywhere. If anything, the media understates
their availability. - Key consumer concerns deception, abuse of trust,
third parties benefiting unjustly - These concerns dovetail with images of greedy,
profiteering drug companies morally bankrupt
system
35Consumer e-Health Push the Positives
- To combat the worst, offer the best
- Build real, fresh benefits into sites, not just
calculators and product labels ally with
third-party sites to gradually address industry
distrust - Evolve the education with the target
- Research users needs and contexts on an ongoing
basis, not once to build a site - Dont confuse satisfaction with value
- Work with health care professionals to provide
complementary information to theirs - Include physician extenders and nurses, often
first line validators - .
36Consumer e-Health Researchers Roles
- Help marketing understand how
- Benefits, costs and value of Web information and
services are defined - Myriad new information products change
expectations - Good, bad and ugly media stories are integrated
with users own experiences - Your organizations image and brand equity can
gain value via the Internet - In Net-based survey research, follow the highest
standards and convey their benefits