"We got mail": electronic communication between physicians and patients.

E-mail has the potential to improve both the quality and efficiency of healthcare service delivery. Despite the substantial growth of this form of communication over the past decade, its promise to patients, providers, and their health plans remains largely untapped. In this article we (1) review the literature on e-mail use between patients and providers; (2) identify challenges and opportunities facing managed care organizations that wish to maximize the potential of this form of communication; (3) describe the components of 2 systems aimed at enhancing e-mail use in clinical settings; and (4) discuss the implications of increased e-mail use for managed care.

[1]  L. Buske Computer use still climbing , 1998 .

[2]  J C Wyatt,et al.  The origin, content, and workload of e-mail consultations. , 1998, JAMA.

[3]  G Eysenbach,et al.  Responses to unsolicited patient e-mail requests for medical advice on the World Wide Web. , 1998, JAMA.

[4]  Gunther Eysenbach,et al.  Evaluation of cyberdocs , 1998, The Lancet.

[5]  R Nelson,et al.  Use of electronic mail as a clinical tool. , 1994, Healthcare information management : journal of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society of the American Hospital Association.

[6]  Kenneth Mandl,et al.  Electronic Patient-Physician Communication: Problems and Promise , 1998, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[7]  M D Hagen,et al.  The utility of electronic mail as a medium for patient-physician communication. , 1994, Archives of family medicine.

[8]  D. Fridsma,et al.  A survey of patient access to electronic mail: attitudes, barriers, and opportunities. , 1994, Proceedings. Symposium on Computer Applications in Medical Care.

[9]  J P Kassirer,et al.  The next transformation in the delivery of health care. , 1995, The New England journal of medicine.

[10]  J. Mold,et al.  Patient-physician E-mail communication. , 1998, The Journal of the Oklahoma State Medical Association.

[11]  F. Hall E-mail and the law. , 1997, AJR. American journal of roentgenology.

[12]  D. A. Tong,et al.  Requests for medical advice from patients and families to health care providers who publish on the World Wide Web. , 1997, Archives of internal medicine.

[13]  C Safran,et al.  Use of electronic mail in a teaching hospital. , 1993, Proceedings. Symposium on Computer Applications in Medical Care.

[14]  G Eysenbach,et al.  Patients looking for information on the Internet and seeking teleadvice: motivation, expectations, and misconceptions as expressed in e-mails sent to physicians. , 1999, Archives of dermatology.

[15]  J H van Bemmel,et al.  Electronic communication between providers of primary and secondary care. , 1992, BMJ.

[16]  Daniel Z. Sands,et al.  Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Electronic Mail with Patients , 1998 .

[17]  Lee Sproull,et al.  Reducing social context cues: electronic mail in organizational communication , 1986 .

[18]  Michael S. Brown Consumer Health and Medical Information on the Internet , 1996 .