| OB/GYN Faculty Offer Expertise Online
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| Dr. Mark Wild checks a resource before he responds to
a question posed by a woman on the website. |
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My ob/gyn suspects that I have PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome).
How hard will it be for me to become pregnant? I am 21 and I want
to have a child when I am about 26 and more established. What can
I do now to make that easier? Will I have to take fertility drugs?
I’m just scared I’ll never have children. -- Imagine,
Columbia, SC
Imagine is not her real name, yet her concerns are very real. Like
many other women she found a helpful resource through the Ask
The Expert section on The State newspaper’s website (www.thestate.com).
Provided by the faculty of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Ask The Expert gives women a place to turn with questions
about female health.
“We thought this would be a good way to reach out and educate
the community on women’s health issues,” said Mark Wild,
M.D., an instructor of obstetrics and gynecology and the department’s
coordinator for the question-and-answer service. Since Ask The
Expert was implemented last year, the number of questions has
soared from approximately eight to about 80 per month. “We’re
not just hearing from women in the United States, but from all over
the world,” Dr. Wild said. Because of the great demand, guidelines
on the website now inform readers that responses will only be posted
to inquiries from the southeastern United States.
With the website averaging about 400 hits a month, Dr. Wild feels
that many women find the information they are seeking from reading
responses to other women’s queries. Faculty members share
the job of addressing the questions, which often center on a number
of common themes, including irregular bleeding, infertility, and
hormone replacement. While some questions are easily answered, others
require research or consultation with other physicians. When medical
concerns are presented that are not related to obstetrics and gynecology,
women are steered to a more appropriate resource.
Sometimes answers are not so easy to come by, particularly when
women ask about specific symptoms they are experiencing as opposed
to general information about a health condition. Dr. Wild explained,
“I give them thoughts on what it could be and try to educate
them. I certainly cannot make a diagnosis without all the information
and examining them.” If a woman’s situation is determined
to be a potentially serious one, a recommendation is made for her
to seek medical attention. Dr. Wild is quick to assert, “People
need to understand that this is not a substitute for seeing a doctor.
We are not practicing online medicine.”
While keeping up with the volume of response is a tremendous challenge,
it’s a challenge that the faculty takes to heart. “One
of our main missions is not only to educate physicians but to educate
the community on women’s health. Through this website we can
reach out to a larger portion of the community not only encompassing
the Columbia area, but the entire Southeast,” Dr. Wild said.
Reprinted from Connections newsletter, April 2003
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