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Carly Lou
01-09-10, 20:36
Finally................ it has hit the news.......... How millions diagnose themselves by google............... and scare them selves sick...... I am just one of the hundreds of us on here that do it everyday xxxxx

I hope this helps you all............ lots of love xxxxxxxxx
Cyberchondriac' nation: Millions of Britons worry themselves sick after misdiagnosing symptoms on Google



By Daily Mail Reporter (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=y&authornamef=Daily+Mail+Reporter)
Last updated at 6:23 PM on 31st August 2010


Comments (54) (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1307608/Britons-worry-sick-misdiagnosing-symptoms-Google.html#comments)
Add to My Stories (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1307608/Britons-worry-sick-misdiagnosing-symptoms-Google.html)


Millions of Britons have convinced themselves they are seriously ill or even dying - after using the internet to diagnose their symptoms, a survey reveals.

Researchers found more than six out of ten adults now turn to the web rather than their GP when they begin to feel under the weather. Almost half of these then convince themselves they are suffering from a serious illness.

Incredibly, one in five said they had managed to worry themselves into believing they were in the early stages of a heart attack after looking up their symptoms.

Other common, but less serious misdiagnoses, include mistaking a stomach upset for food poisoning and believing a common cold was in fact an attack of flu.
The study, carried out among 3,000 adults by Engage Mutual, also revealed more than a third of those with headaches had convinced themselves they had a migraine, while 28 per cent of people with abdominal pain mistakenly self-diagnosed appendicitis.
Of course worrying about one's health is nothing new. The characters in Jerome K Jerome's famous 1889 novel 'Three Men in a Boat' are all convinced they have a number of maladies. But while the narrator looked up his symptoms in the British Museum, modern worriers go online.
10 commonly self-misdiagnosed health concerns


Stomach upset - Food poisoning
Common cold - Flu
Headache - Migraine
Lower abdomen pain - Appendicitis
Stiff joints - Arthritis
Indigestion - Heart attack
Hungover - Food poisoning
Migraine - Brain tumour
Short of breath - Lung disease
Lower back ache - Kidney disease


Tina Clare, Head of Brand, at Engage Mutual said: 'We seem to be a nation of worriers when it comes to our health.

'Forty six per cent of people are worried about getting a terminal illness, and many are convincing themselves that everyday symptoms are indicative of serious ill health.

'While the internet can be a great information resource, it is always best to see a doctor when ill.

'Not only can a medical professional put your mind at rest, they can also check out all the symptoms and tell you what the matter really is.'

It also emerged many people have mistaken stiff joints for arthritis or a hangover for 'something they ate' or 'food poisoning'.

One in six of migraine sufferers think they could have a brain tumour, while the same proportion of those who felt short of breath concluded they had lung disease.

The study also found only a quarter of respondents phone NHS Direct if they feel ill.

On average Britons visit a nurse or doctor two or three times a year, but 10 per cent said a doctor has told them they have overreacted.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1307608/Britons-worry-sick-misdiagnosing-symptoms-Google.html#ixzz0yJ9mmSrV

Chem
01-09-10, 22:04
Yep - it's an unwritten rule on nmp - do not google!!! Come to us for advice instead. It's much safer and more reliable.

j2
02-09-10, 01:52
It should be a written rule.:)

mikewales
02-09-10, 08:34
hmm obvious answer is go to your doctor ! If my car isnt working, I take it to the garage, if the boiler packs up, I call in a plumber - there is a reason docs have all those nice framed certificates in their rooms :)

debs71
02-09-10, 10:47
lol....I am guilty of that too.

It is also compounded by the fact I am a registered nurse so I have already diagnosed myself in the head based on my symptoms and then I Google it to check if I'm right, ha ha!

It is both a blessing and a curse the information garnered from the internet about health as it can be highly informative, but only if you have the right mind set using it, which when you have a panic disorder, may not be a criteria you totally fit!

My Mum always berates me for this and tells me my problem is I have too much inside knowledge from nursing and when you see a lot of sick people and know all the things that can be wrong you assume all kinds of things, so worry only when it is CONFIRMED you should worry!

Not rocket science but hard to do sometimes when you suffer from panic disorder.