Hitting a Nerve

Online vitriol’s expansion into doctor discussion sites


 

The web is full of doctor discussion sites. Sermo, Doximity, and many others. Each is slightly different, but the idea is similar. Give docs a place to joke, discuss cases, etc. A virtual doctors’ lounge.

Doctor using social media cyano66/Thinkstock

Roughly 10 years ago I was active on Sermo. It was fun to check in a few days a week after work, ask questions about my own cases, and see if anyone had ideas on them, make a few suggestions on others, occasionally gripe about administrative issues at my hospital and commiserate about such online.

I don’t do that anymore.

This morning I logged in to see if anyone had previously encountered an unusual case, but was quickly pushed off by venom.

Anonymous websites, by their very nature, tend to attract nastiness since the writers can’t be held accountable. As a result, many of them have turned from medical sites to political vitriol.

Yes, they do have a political discussion board, but staying away from politics is easier said than done online. Like mud, it tends to ooze into places it doesn’t belong. Even a routine post asking about new treatments for multiple sclerosis quickly degenerates. In a demonstration of Godwin’s Law, any comment about the pros and cons of a new agent devolves into a fight over government vs. private insurance, the United States’ vs. other countries’ health systems, and, inevitably, Trump, Obama, and name calling.

Makes it hard to actually kick around thoughts on Ocrevus (or whatever).

Generally, this won’t happen in a real doctors’ lounge because you know each other. Even if you’re not friends, people generally (not always) tend to be civil in person. Even differences are usually handled with a polite agreement to disagree.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist is Scottsdale, Ariz.

Dr. Allan M. Block

I suspect the majority of people on Sermo and similar sites are reasonable and joined the sites for the same reasons I did. Unfortunately, we’ve been drowned out by a handful of angry voices who hijack these sites by posting intentionally inflammatory statements just to pick a fight or derail a thoughtful discussion on epilepsy management with nasty jabs relating medical issues directly to politics.

So my time using these sites has dropped. Occasionally, if I was bored, I’d log in to see if there were any interesting cases in my field, but even those often get dragged down by the angry as you try to contribute thoughts and answer questions in the comments.

Sadly, this has became the norm rather then the exception. For me, at least, it’s easier to just walk away entirely.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Recommended Reading

The ongoing issue of gender disparities in interventional cardiology
MDedge Cardiology
Michigan Medicine launches effort to make wellness a cultural norm
MDedge Cardiology
500 Women in Medicine: Part I
MDedge Cardiology
In search of an ear
MDedge Cardiology
Getting a good night’s sleep
MDedge Cardiology
Fund projects, not people to address gender bias in research funding
MDedge Cardiology
Love hormone plein air, posh preused Kleenex, and dieting plague vectors
MDedge Cardiology
Culture change needed to improve gender inequalities in medicine
MDedge Cardiology
500 Women in Medicine: Part II
MDedge Cardiology
Diagnostic metal rod, eyeball extramission, fungal foot fetish
MDedge Cardiology