Parents turn to the Internet before going to the emergency room
BOSTON (Reuters Health) - One in eight parents go online for medical information about your child's condition before taking the child to the emergency room, according to new research.
Moreover, many parents would be willing to visit the sites recommended by your child's doctor - which means that pediatricians should be prepared to offer advice on this subject, according to Dr. Purvi Shroff University of Louisville in Kentucky .
She presented her findings Friday at the 2011 national conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Boston.
Dr. Shroff and her team interviewed 240 parents or guardians with Internet access that took her son to the emergency room.
They found 12 percent of parents had consulted the Web about their children's problems in the past 24 hours, while half said they used Internet at least once in the three months prior to a health-related question of his son.
The most common sites were WebMD and Wikipedia, but few parents are using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, led by the government or the American Academy of Pediatrics healthy site "Children.
Most parents of Internet users said they were likely to visit a website that was recommended by your child's physician.
"Being invested in the health of your child and wanting to learn more and make the best decision for your child is always a good thing. However, when it comes to using the Internet, the proper use depends on having access to sites good and whether or not the information that is applicable to your child, "said Dr. Shroff Reuters Health.
It is important, he said, that parents are able to talk to pediatricians about what they read on the Internet, and for the doctor to put in the context of each child.
Parents turn to the Internet before going to the emergency room
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