11-11-2006, 08:27 PM
<!--emo&:cool--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/specool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='specool.gif' /><!--endemo--> Doctors Can Google Tough Cases
By Sara Goudarzi
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 10 November 2006
09:56 am ET
When stumped with an ailment they can't diagnose, doctors can turn to the Internet search engine Google.
Using three to five search terms from 26 diagnostic cases from the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers did a Google search to see what kind of diagnosis they could get.
Google searches found the correct diagnoses in 15 of the cases, the researchers write in this weekâs issue of the British Medical Journal.
Itâs estimated that doctors carry close to two million facts in their head to aid them in analyzing ills. However, with the ever expanding pool of medical knowledge, the task grows ever more challenging.
âOur study suggests that in difficult diagnostic cases, it is often useful to Google for a diagnosis,â the researchers note. Arguably, everything could be found on the web if only one knew the correct search terms. Therefore, Google searches by a âhuman expert,â such as a doctor, have a better yield.
By Sara Goudarzi
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 10 November 2006
09:56 am ET
When stumped with an ailment they can't diagnose, doctors can turn to the Internet search engine Google.
Using three to five search terms from 26 diagnostic cases from the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers did a Google search to see what kind of diagnosis they could get.
Google searches found the correct diagnoses in 15 of the cases, the researchers write in this weekâs issue of the British Medical Journal.
Itâs estimated that doctors carry close to two million facts in their head to aid them in analyzing ills. However, with the ever expanding pool of medical knowledge, the task grows ever more challenging.
âOur study suggests that in difficult diagnostic cases, it is often useful to Google for a diagnosis,â the researchers note. Arguably, everything could be found on the web if only one knew the correct search terms. Therefore, Google searches by a âhuman expert,â such as a doctor, have a better yield.