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- <text id=91TT1621>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: Reach Out and Cure Someone
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 54
- Reach Out and Cure Someone
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A new 900 number offers medical advice by phone, but can it
- replace a family physician's personal touch?
- </p>
- <p>By Andrew Purvis
- </p>
- <p> Ah, the conveniences of the electronic age! At a time
- when everything from diaper and sushi deliveries to kinky
- romantic trysts can be had with a few touch tones, yet another
- novel entry has arrived in this vibrant market-by-wire. Why
- spend hours traveling to the doctor's office, leafing through
- out-of-date magazines, waiting for the healer to spare a moment
- of precious, not to mention expensive time, when one can now get
- instant medical gratification over the phone? Why not simply
- dial a doc?
- </p>
- <p> That is the proposition being promoted on freeway
- billboards, along train platforms and in newspapers around New
- York City this summer. The ads tout a unique new 900-number
- service called Doctors by Phone, which provides professional
- medical advice for $3 a minute. Similar campaigns are scheduled
- to appear next month in Los Angeles, Miami and Chicago, among
- other cities. But the program has already drawn fierce
- criticism. Says Philip Boyle, an ethicist at the Hastings Center
- in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.: "There is just no substitute for the
- clinical encounter. They are selling something that they cannot
- provide."
- </p>
- <p> The service certainly could soothe a sore spot. American
- physicians are notoriously hard to reach, leaving thousands of
- patients frustrated by their inability to get answers to basic
- medical questions. In addition, asserts Dr. Thomas Kovachevich,
- 49, founder of Doctors by Phone, patients often hesitate to
- bother their busy doctors with problems that seem too trivial
- or embarrassing. Kovachevich, an adjunct assistant professor of
- family medicine at the Chicago Osteopathic Medical Center,
- points to a class of relatively simple medical queries that can
- be addressed quickly and effectively over the telephone. These
- range from deciding which specialist to consult to interpreting
- blood tests and probing the obscure side effects of a particular
- medication. More ticklish questions may be easier to ask of an
- anonymous voice. Some of the more common problems raised in the
- thousands of calls received during the past month: "The condom
- broke. Do I need an AIDS test?" Not necessarily. "I can't
- perform sexually. Could it be related to my medication?" Yes,
- depending on the drug.
- </p>
- <p> Since 900 numbers are perhaps better known for
- personalized horoscopes and phone sex than serious subjects like
- medical care, Kovachevich has taken pains to underscore the
- respectability of his operation. To avoid obvious conflicts of
- interest, he does not allow his doctors to see the patients they
- talk to (all referrals are made to the New York County Medical
- Society), and his staff cannot prescribe medications over the
- phone. Such caution is also a hedge against malpractice suits.
- Although the service is fully insured, some courts have been
- critical of care delivered by telephone.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the 80 physicians taking calls are recent
- graduates of leading medical schools in the New York City area,
- usually hospital residents still in training, most of them
- seeking extra income to pay off student loans. A few of the
- doctors are retired. The pay is comparable with that offered to
- entry-level emergency room attendants (about $40 an hour), and
- the work, some feel, is more rewarding. Says Dr. Neil Stollman,
- 28, a senior resident in internal medicine at
- Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center who has manned the phones
- on and off for Kovachevich since June: "In the emergency room,
- I would often get this kind of call. Just a simple question. But
- meanwhile two people are dying. I just didn't have time to talk.
- This gives me the opportunity to focus on a patient."
- Kovachevich predicts a new era of "information doctors" who
- specialize in caring for people by wire alone.
- </p>
- <p> Critics of remote-control medicine say communicating by
- phone may be a reasonable way to diagnose a problem with a car,
- but not to understand the intricacies of human disease. Dr.
- Daniel Isaacman, a pediatrician at Pittsburgh's Childrens
- Hospital who has examined the question of remote diagnosis,
- cites a study in which 61 emergency-room doctors were contacted
- by phone and presented with the same hypothetical patient, a
- baby boy with a 102 degrees fever. For a child under two months,
- such a fever can signal a life-threatening infection. Nearly 30%
- of doctors responding did not ask the child's age and so failed
- to recommend that the youngster even come in for an exam.
- Richard Kessel, executive director of New York State's Consumer
- Protection Board, which is looking into the service, notes that
- patients may be spending money on what they think is a final
- answer, when "many will still have to go to a doctor and pay
- additional bills." Kovachevich says that about 75% of calls are
- indeed referred to other doctors.
- </p>
- <p> A serious concern of physicians is that if 900 services
- catch on, they will deter patients from establishing a rapport
- with their family doctor and cause them to miss out on vital
- ongoing preventive advice. "A cornerstone of good medical care
- is continuity and getting to know a patient as an individual,"
- explains Isaacman. "This service is going to discourage that
- kind of care and encourage patients to seek a quick, temporary
- fix."
- </p>
- <p> Several medical societies, including the American Medical
- Association, are studying the 900 idea, but they have yet to
- come to any conclusions about its usefulness or safety. For now,
- it seems, patients would be wise to think carefully before
- dialing--and get a stopwatch. At $3 a minute, or $180 an hour,
- the bill itself could trigger cardiac symptoms too grave for any
- phone doctor to resolve.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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