Cyberchondria

Author:

White Ryen W.1,Horvitz Eric1

Affiliation:

1. Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA

Abstract

The World Wide Web provides an abundant source of medical information. This information can assist people who are not healthcare professionals to better understand health and illness, and to provide them with feasible explanations for symptoms. However, the Web has the potential to increase the anxieties of people who have little or no medical training, especially when Web search is employed as a diagnostic procedure. We use the termcyberchondriato refer to the unfoundedescalationof concerns about common symptomatology, based on the review of search results and literature on the Web. We performed a large-scale, longitudinal, log-based study of how people search for medical information online, supported by a survey of 515 individuals' health-related search experiences. We focused on the extent to which common, likely innocuous symptoms can escalate into the review of content on serious, rare conditions that are linked to the common symptoms. Our results show that Web search engines have the potential to escalate medical concerns. We show that escalation is associated with the amount and distribution of medical content viewed by users, the presence of escalatory terminology in pages visited, and a user's predisposition to escalate versus to seek more reasonable explanations for ailments. We also demonstrate the persistence of postsession anxiety following escalations and the effect that such anxieties can have on interrupting user's activities across multiple sessions. Our findings underscore the potential costs and challenges of cyberchondria and suggest actionable design implications that hold opportunity for improving the search and navigation experience for people turning to the Web to interpret common symptoms.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Science Applications,General Business, Management and Accounting,Information Systems

Reference46 articles.

1. Improving web search ranking by incorporating user behavior information

2. American Psychiatric Association. 1994. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th Ed. APA Washington DC. American Psychiatric Association. 1994. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th Ed. APA Washington DC.

3. Chronic illness and health-seeking information on the Internet

4. Use of the Internet and E-mail for Health Care Information

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