Patient Satisfaction News

Direct-to-Consumer Healthcare Websites Need Better Patient Education

Direct-to-consumer healthcare websites for testosterone therapy helped improve access to care, but they don’t meet industry standards for patient education.

direct-to-consumer healthcare websites need better patient education

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Direct-to-consumer healthcare websites that offer a medication after online screening might be improving patient access to care, but they often fail to provide the patient education industry groups say is necessary to ensure informed treatment decisions, according to research in JAMA Internal Medicine.

The researchers zeroed in on DTC websites offering testosterone therapy to cisgender men. In an analysis of these websites, the team found that services don’t follow American Urological Association (AUA) or Endocrine Society (ES) guidelines for patient education.

This comes as direct-to-consumer online services become commonplace in healthcare. These companies are prevalent in the mental and reproductive healthcare space and provide patients access to prescription medications after a telehealth consultation with an online provider.