Grand_Rounds_(journal)

E-med

E-med

UK online medical site


e-med (e-Med Private Medical Services) is an online medical site based in the UK, staffed and owned by doctors.[1] It is notable for being the first[2] web portal to offer consultation, diagnosis, referral and prescription services[3] to remote patients via email and Skype video conferencing, and for a controversial General Medical Council case.[4]

e-med

In the UK, e-med (e-med Private Medical Services Ltd) was the first[5] online health site to offer both diagnosis and prescriptions over the internet to patients without the time or proximity to visit a doctor. It was established in March 2000[6] by Dr. Julian Eden, drawing on his remote medicine experience as a doctor serving the world traveller,[7][8] SCUBA and dive population (between 2002 and 2004, he was The Guardian newspaper's "Flying Doctor").[9]

At the time, e-med's instant popularity (with six hundred patients signed up in the first month) was criticised[10] by the medical establishment, including the BMA (British Medical Association). Dr Paul Cundy, a member of the BMA's IT committee, argued: "When it comes to online consultation or diagnosis, then I think the internet is simply not robust enough. There are no regulations to protect patients, and they are completely and utterly at the mercy of internet doctors."[11]

In 2011, e-med had logged over one million consultations and was serving 500,000 patients worldwide annually.[12] e-med was also the first medical practice to use Skype,[13] a videoconferencing service, to conduct "face-to-face" consultations between doctors and patients in different locations.

The model established by e-med and other UK online consulting sites[14] is not only being adopted in other European countries, but also by the UK's state medical service. Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, the medical director of the NHS (National Health Service), mandated the implementation of new plans that would introduce online consultations via Skype, noting that IT will "completely change the way [doctors] deliver medicine".[15]

Grand Rounds

The website publishes the open access case report journal Grand Rounds.

Controversy

In 2007, complaints were registered with the General Medical Council (GMC), the body overseeing British doctors, alleging "misprescription of dangerous drugs" by Dr. Julian Eden.[16] Two of the complaints were made by national newspaper reporters listing false details with e-med[17][18][19] and another by Ian van Every, a company director of Dr. Thom.com, a medical website run by his brother, Thomas van Every.[20] As a result, Eden was removed from the medical register in 2009.[21] His case is currently under appeal.[needs update]


References

  1. The doctor will e-mail you now The Independent, 3 May 2005
  2. BBC, over the internet
  3. Ask The Doctor The travel health website for travellers
  4. The obsessive traveller The Independent, 7 January 2001
  5. Flying doctor The Guardian, 10 May 2003
  6. BBC, Patients flock to net doctors
  7. What we do About e-med
  8. Skype opens up to net doctor Skype release March 2008
  9. British websites are pushing boundaries of online medicineUSA Today 8 July 2011, quote: "The British websites are definitely an exception, but they are the start of a trend we will soon see everywhere," Dr. Steinar Pedersen, a founder and special adviser at the Norwegian Centre for Telemedicine.
  10. The doctor will see you now . . . over the internetThe Times quoting Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, NHS Medical Director, 29 August 2011
  11. "Internet drug GP suspended by GMC" BBC News, 20 February 2007.
  12. GMC Transcript 1. GMC Hearing Transcript Day 1, 12 February 2007.
  13. . GMC Hearing Transcript Day 2, 13 February 2007.
  14. GMC Transcript 3. GMC Hearing Transcript Day 3, 14 February 2007.
  15. "DrThom launch 'male health' service online" Archived 29 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine. EHI Health Insider 8 October 2007.
  16. Panther, Lewis (15 July 2017). "TV doc Hilary Jones slammed as pharmacy he fronts linked to disgraced former GP". mirror.co.uk. Retrieved 29 June 2020.

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