ASH Clinical News July 2016 | Page 52

Features How Do You Rank? Online physician-rating websites have been around for more than a decade, but many physicians and patients still have questions about how to use them. The way people access information has changed substantially in the last 15 to 20 years, and that is no different for how consum ers find physicians. Gone are the days when a family, or even a town, sees the same doctor. In the information age, people can pick a doctor based on reviews, ratings, and rankings posted by other patients on online physicianrating websites. Just as they might search for a reputable contractor on AngiesList.com, patients can search for a physician on a variety of online rating websites – includ- 50 ASH Clinical News ing Vitals.com, RateMDs.com, and even Yelp.com – and use the information they find to decide whether or not to see that physician for care, without ever having met him or her face to face. A study published in JAMA in 2014 by David A. Hanauer, MD, and colleagues found that consumers are basing their decisions on these types of rating websites more and more. Among a group of 2,137 survey respondents, 59 percent believed that physician ratings sites were “somewhat important” or “very important” when it came to select- ing a physician.1 More than one-third of respondents reported selecting a physician based on a positive rating, and 37 percent avoided a physician because of a negative rating. “The online rating websites seem to be filling a big void,” Dr. Hanauer, clinical associate professor of pediatrics at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital in the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor, Michigan, told ASH Clinical News. “Before these websites, patients had no easily accessible place to go to find information about physicians. July 2016