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Optometrists and Blogging

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December 5th, 2006
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Blogging Essays, General

This is the third entrant in The Blogging Essay Contest from WeblogToolsCollection.com If you would like to participate, please email me your entry at mark at wltc dot net. Please rate this article using the star system below. The competition will be judged primarily on the input from readers like you. Thank you.

This is written by David from Optoblog.com

I am an optometric physician. I began blogging when my friend, Josh Bancroft of tinyscreenfuls.com, introduced me to it in October of 2004. I soon caught the vision of RSS and blogs, and finally started my own at optoblog.com. I had intended it to be the start of something: optometrists blogging about all things eye doctor and also giving feedback to the ophthalmic product industry. Unfortunately, no one else bothered to join the conversation (at least publicly, but more about that later). Why are there not more optometrists, or for that matter other medical professionals, blogging?

The ophthalmic industry knows about blogging and even podcasting. Acuvue contact lenses had a miserable but thankfully short-lived podcast aimed at teenage girl consumers. Dryeyeblog.com is written by a doctor of one ophthalmic drug company who refutes the research of another ophthalmic drug company. But most blogs are short lived, or at least infrequently updated like Practicemanagementblog.com and Optometric Office Design News. It seems that organizations in the industry heard something along the lines of Scoble’s book which preaches blogging will make your business grow drastically, they tried it out for a while, it probably didn’t bring in the big returns, and so they abandoned their blog.

It could be their fault, but then again, are there any eye doctors out there listening? Optometrists are traditionally slow adopters when it comes to technology. Apparently the people at Standard Optical haven’t even heard of a remarkable device called a door for their exam room (they use curtains). Have you ever been to some optical shop, and the equipment looked like it was older than your parents? It probably was. Now try to get these doctors to pay attention to what is being said on the internet.

But there are some optometrists that are net savvy, but what are they doing? They finally caught on to bulletin boards. The biggest one I know of is ODwire; however, membership is exclusive. They don’t want their conversations to be seen by the general public. They think it’s a secret that doctors actually want to make money, so they don’t share with the world their suggestions with each other on how to grow their business. They complain about ophthalmic product companies, but can ophthalmic product companies join the private board? I think so, but I don’t know of more than one. I think the secrecy and exclusive membership choke the conversation.

The only other optometrist that I know of who blogs faithfully doesn’t even blog about optometry. She blogs about knitting and has 120 Bloglines subscribers! There are a couple optometry school student (oppie) bloggers. The new oppies are more with it in terms of blogging, but they could do so much more. During the 4th year while out on preceptorship, there is a required 4 week correspondence class. The teacher actually uses the internet to bring together students from all over the country and give one online clinical case presentation each; but what about blogging? Imagine if the only requirement of the class was that you maintain a year round blog about interesting cases you see. Instead of enlightening a small group with just one case report, you could discuss multiple cases with the entire class! Imagine school sanctioned blogging! Think of all the information we could learn.

But that’s another problem. Everyone is afraid of lawsuits. What if the information we share with each other gets us in trouble? I think that’s why more medical professionals don’t blog. They don’t want to be accused of dispensing medical advice to someone for whom it wasn’t intended. Imagine a doctor distilling the virtues of anti-oxidant vitamins, so a person happens upon the blog entry and decides to take them…particularly vitamin A…in megadoses…and dies because the person smokes like a chimney.

In treating a patient, we doctors like to get paid so we can pay for malpractice insurance premiums which covers the risk of treating patients. We don’t get paid for blogging. The last thing we need is the family of some chain-smoking gramma from a different state to sue us out of business.

Aside from medical-condition-related content, what about conversing regarding the ophthalmic product industry? If more optometrists would blog about vendors publically, then maybe the corporations would know how to make their product better. I’ve written reviews of certain products marketed towards eye doctors, like electronic health record (EHR) and practice management (PIM) software, and a VIP from the company responded to my blog entry. These vendors must be surfing around looking for comments about them because I didn’t contact most of them. I am terribly dismayed by PIM/EHR shortcomings and the lack of features that I desire, but at least they have an ear out. But what annoys me about the vendors is most would choose to respond to me offline, well…e-mail. So instead of everyone seeing their counterpoints, only I could read it.

I wish the ophthalmic vendors themselves would start blogs. I would like to read about what they are working on next instead of waiting for a convention or a biased review in an industry rag. I would like to hear from the horse’s mouth why I should use their current products, and it would be nice to know who these people are in the first place. Industry rags have a virtual monopoly on ophthalmic product information dissemination. Blogs could shift the balance of power, but only if optometrists ever get savvy enough to figure out how to use a feed aggregator.

But even if the vendors did start blogging, I worry it would be short lived or just considered a cool new way to advertise. A blog should be viewed like having a telephone: just one more needed way to communicate with people. It’s not the savior, be all and end all of a marketing plan. It is one more useful tool of communication.

So why do I blog? I admit that I haven’t been blogging a lot on my optoblog.com website. I have shifted most of my blogging to my practice website with an audience of potential and current patients. My blog intended for other optometrists and vendors has petered out because, quite frankly, I don’t think anyone is listening. If an eye doctor is walking alone in a forest and stubs his toe, does he cuss up a blue streak? Maybe, but if no one is paying attention, then why make a big fuss? When an audience isn’t there, it takes a lot of internal motivation to keep blogging. I don’t do it for therapy. I was hoping to be part of a conversation, but the problem is all the conversations seem to be behind closed doors (or bulletin boards).

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  1. Drake says:

    It’s unfortunate that a group of Doctor’s, who are supposed to help people, keep useful information from those who could use their help.
    Very well written. It’s not always easy getting traffic to your blog. I’m sure if you keep up the good work that they will eventually come.

  2. ptvGuy says:

    What do you know, a doctor that sounds like a human being. So you guys actually do stub your toes and lose your keys and other normal stuff? Who knew.

    I had a lot of the same problems getting my blog going. My target audience in the world of public television rarely leaves any public comments on my blog. They email me. It’s the rest of the world I hear from on my blog. Still, even though they’re not doing it publicly, it’s getting a lot of people talking. Don’t assume they’re not looking.



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