Original
Paper Published by the Journal of Medical Internet Research
An
International Scientific Journal for eHealth - Medical Research, Information
and Communication on the Internet
Internet-based
Prescription of Sildenafil: A 2104-Patient Series
Miles
J. Jones MD
Medical
Director
NetDr
International
9601 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 1123
Beverly Hills CA. 90210
- Abstract
and Keywords
- Introduction
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Reference
Background:
The Internet is becoming increasingly important as a way for patients
to acquire medical information and as a means for patient-physician communication.
Questions about appropriate use of this new technology have been brought
to the fore by the many patients using the Internet to seek sildenafil
prescriptions.
Objective:
To present the first description of a physician designed and directed
Internet-based prescribing system of sildenafil, together with data covering
more than 2,100 patient encounters.
Methods:
Retrospective analysis of a large case series from a medical practice
that prescribes sildenafil based on medical and sexual histories obtained
through a physician designed and directed World Wide Web (WWW) site, compared
against patients from clinics at a Midwestern inner city medical center.
We compared all 2,104 Internet patients seeking sildenafil prescriptions
online between June 14, 1998, and March 1, 1999, with all 36 medical center
patients obtaining sildenafil prescriptions during the same period.
The outcome measures compared were: completeness of medical record; patient
safety as noted by the follow up responses of all patients requesting
refills, any comments received by the internet site (webmaster), and patient
or physician comments noted in the clinic medical record; satisfaction
as noted by the follow up responses of all patients requesting refills,
any comments received by the internet site (webmaster), and patient or
physician comments noted in the clinic medical record; examinations and
laboratory tests.
Results:
Fifty-six percent of Internet requests came from 46 states, and 44% from
eight foreign countries. Of 2,104 requests, 2,100 were granted. Three
hundred ten patients have requested medication refills: all reported erections
sufficient for intercourse and 69% said their satisfaction exceeded all
expectations; none were at all dissatisfied. Side effect rates were comparable
to those in the literature. Comparison of the medical history obtained
from Internet patients with that recorded in clinic patients' charts revealed
that the former was far more complete. No clinic patient received any
examination or laboratory test specific for erectile dysfunction or its
causes. There were no reported deaths or serious complications in either
group.
Conclusions:
Internet-based prescription of sildenafil provides the physician with
a complete and very detailed medical and sexual history for 100% of patients
without denying any information routinely obtained in a direct patient
contact setting. Internet-based practice, which may be expected to require
far fewer healthcare resources than traditional settings, rates very high
in patient satisfaction among patients requesting a refill; no negative
comments were received from all other patients. Overall, these data support
the safety and effectiveness of Internet prescribing of selected medications.
KEYWORDS
Impotence;
Medical History Taking; Prescriptions, Drug; Questionnaires;
Internet; Commerce; Quality of Health Care; Side Effects;
Sildenafil; Physician-Patient Relations.
Erectile
dysfunction is an extremely common condition: according to
the Massachusetts Male Aging Study, 52% of surveyed men aged
40 to 70 had some degree of erectile dysfunction, with dysfunction
being moderate to complete in approximately half of the 70-year-old
men. Similarly, the National Health and Social Life Survey
found erectile dysfunction reported by 18% of men aged 50
to 59 (the oldest group surveyed). Until recently, the condition
was often ignored. This reflected both the mistaken perception
that nothing practical could be done, and the understandable
discomfort of many patients and healthcare providers in openly
and frankly discussing sexual matters.
This
changed dramatically with the March 1998 approval of sildenafil
(Viagra, Pfizer), the first effective oral medication for
treatment of erectile dysfunction. Within two weeks, newspapers
reported physicians were writing 15,000 to 20,000 prescriptions
a day for the medication. Erectile dysfunction had graduated
from secret shame to headline news.
Even
with erectile dysfunction on the front pages, many men continue
to feel uncomfortable discussing their own conditions face-to-face
with a health-care provider. At the same time, many patients
are turning to the Internet for medical information and advice
on a wide variety of conditions, often because they find the
relative anonymity of the Internet less intimidating than
a traditional office-based consultation. Their Internet usage
may take the form of formal physician consultation; informal
physician-originated information and advice; or information,
advice, and support from others with similar conditions.
This combination
of circumstances suggests the Internet as a natural resource for addressing
the needs of men with erectile dysfunction who may be reluctant to seek
help from their regular physicians. To meet this need, the NET Doctor
Group (an association of physicians, pharmacists, and information specialists)
established an Internet-based system to provide information on erectile
dysfunction and its treatment with sildenafil; to obtain the medical histories
of patients with this condition, when appropriate and desired by the patient;
and to prescribe sildenafil and, if requested, dispense it through an
independent licensed pharmacy. We report on the first 2,104 patients to
request sildenafil prescriptions, together with a comparison group of
patients who received sildenafil prescriptions in a traditional medical
practice (inner city teaching hospital clinic) setting, during the same
10.5 month period.
Setting
The
Net Doctor International Ltd. is a private company that uses
a physician-designed World Wide Web (WWW) site (http://www.netdr.com)
to collect patient information and medical history relevant
to prescription of sildenafil. Physicians associated with
but not employed by the Net Doctor International Ltd.review
the provided medical history, on a fee-for-service basis (the
fee is waived if the requested prescription is refused). All
physicians are United States educated and trained, hold active
license in multiple states, have current DEA registrations,
practice independently of the Net Doctor International Ltd.,
provide full licensure and identification information to dispensing
pharmacies, and maintain individual professional liability
insurance. The physicians also attempt to make telephone contact
with all patients requesting sildenafil prescriptions; such
contact is required when the submitted information appears
contradictory or otherwise inadequate to support a decision.
Requests are typically approved or refused within 24 hours
of submission.
U.S. patients
who are approved for sildenafil prescription have a choice of receiving
the medication directly from the Net Doctor International Ltd.'s independent
pharmacy (not owned or operated by the Net Doctor International Ltd.),
or of having the prescription faxed to their usual pharmacy. Non-U.S.
patients receive the medication directly from the Net Doctor International
Ltd.. All prescriptions are written for 100-mg tablets of sildenafil as
follows:
Use 1/2
tab po at least 30 min. before anticipated intercourse (may need to
take up to 2 hours before intercourse for maximal effect). If effect
inadequate try 1 tab po as above. Warning: Do not take more than 1 tab/day.
If unusual pain or symptoms occur consult physician. If chest pain occurs
report immediately to nearest ER.
For unusual
pain or symptoms, patients are advised to consult a physician. Patients
are free to contact any physician, including the Net Doctor International
Ltd. associated physicians, at any time. The patient insert (see Figure
2a) advises the patient to consult his or her personal physician.
For the most severe and life threatening reactions associated with vigorous
or infrequent sexual activity, patients are unequivocally advised to report
immediately to the nearest ER.
The patient
informational insert developed specifically for the Net Doctor International
Ltd.'s patients and included with directly dispensed medication is shown
in Figure 2a. The patient information sheet used
by the private pharmacy for its non-Net Doctor International Ltd. clients
is shown in Figure 2b. The typical prescription written
for non-Net Doctor International Ltd. patients is for 25 mg sildenafil
and reads as follows: Take as directed.
Patients
This study
includes all patients of the Net Doctor International Ltd. who requested
prescriptions for sildenafil during the period from the opening of the
Web site on June 14, 1998, to March 1, 1999. All patients acknowledged
a waiver of liability and agreed to specific terms of comprehension and
truthfulness before submitting their request for physician consultation.
The wavier applies to the Net Doctor International Ltd., and not the independent
physicians associated with the Net Doctor International Ltd., as they
are not employees of the Net Doctor International Ltd.. Each physician
may rely on the patient's understanding of sildenafil and its potential
complications, and the veracity of the patient's answers to the data collection
device, as implied by the wavier.
We informally
compare these Internet patients to patients receiving sildenafil prescriptions
at clinics of an inner city teaching hospital during the same period.
We reviewed charts of these patients, most of whom had been seen on several
occasions prior to prescription of sildenafil, for a period of up to one
year prior to the prescribing visit and for all subsequent visits. This
report covers information obtained from the medical records of all patients
who received sildenafil prescriptions as a result of in-person clinic
consultations. It should be noted that the clinics are part of an inner
city teaching hospital that is a publicly owned and operated facility.
Thus, most clinic patients are members of a lower socioeconomic group.
Most patients of the hospital do not have the financial means to afford
treatment for erectile dysfunction. The small number of patients (36)
in the office-based comparison group is a reflection of the group's socioeconomic
status.
Characteristics
of patients receiving sildenafil prescriptions are reported in Table
1. During the period covered by this report, 2,104 patients requested
sildenafil prescriptions at the Net Doctor International Ltd. Web site.
These patients were somewhat younger than typical for men with erectile
dysfunction (mean age 49.4 + 5.3 years, median age 45.9 years), possibly
reflecting a lower rate of computer usage among the elderly. Diagnoses
of hypertension were reported by 18%, of diabetes by 13%, and of atherosclerosis
by 7%. Ten patients had been treated for prostate cancer and one had experienced
a spinal cord injury. Approximately 33% of the patients said they smoked;
very few reported more than social drinking, while an unusually high 86%
reported exercising regularly.

[enlarge] |
Table
1.
Characteristics of Internet Patients Receiving Sildenafil Prescriptions |
About 95%
of the patients said that their impotence had occurred gradually, and
97% that it involved an inability to maintain, rather than to achieve,
an erection. Most said their penises were slightly firm but not self-supporting,
although a significant minority reported hardness sufficient for sex despite
decreased firmness. Eighty seven percent indicated that there were times
they were not impotent.
Significantly,
almost 66% of the patients reported previously seeking treatment from
other physicians for their erectile dysfunction. At least 75% of these
men received only psychological counseling or reassurance, and almost
none were satisfied with their previous treatment.
Of the 2,104
requests for sildenafil, 2,100 were granted. The small number of refused
requests may appear unusual. It must be remembered that patients requested
sildenafil only after reading information on the drug and its contraindications
and completing an extensive medical history form. Individuals with contraindications
to sildenafil presumably did not complete and submit the form, and therefore
do not appear in the database of patients requesting sildenafil.
Three of
the requests that were refused came from the same address, provided the
same demographic information, and requested the maximum number of tablets
(30) for a single prescription. Attempts to reach the requester or requesters
by telephone were unavailing. The other patient whose request was refused
reported having been diagnosed with stroke, hypertension, and angina,
yet denied chest pain. Attempts to reach him by telephone were likewise
unavailing. Attempts were made to contact all patients by telephone. Less
than 10% of all patients had conversations with the consulting physician.
Less than one dozen questions required a physician's response; all questions
were answered by email within 24 hours. The questioning patients submitted
no follow-up questions.
There were
2,101 male patients and 3 female patients in the group. One of the female
patients reported a complete absence of libido, which had been relieved
by taking sildenafil. The second had experienced sexual dysfunction since
her complete hysterectomy three years previously. The physician managing
her case had recommended that she try sildenafil in addition to the estrogen-testosterone
combination with which she was currently being treated. The third reported
problems of sexual performance. She was prescribed 10 sildenafil tablets.
Three
hundred ten (14.76%) of the 2,100 patients requested refills
during the study period and have filled out forms reporting
their experiences with the drug (see Table
3). The number of patients granted refills at their pharmacies
is unrecorded. All 310 reported improvement sufficient for
them to resume sexual activity and to achieve penetration.
Two hundred eighty seven reported that they almost always
enjoyed successful sexual performance, with 16 claiming that
their sexual performance was always successful and 7 stating
that successful performance occurred occasionally. Two hundred
fifteen said that their overall satisfaction exceeded all
expectations, 76 that it met most expectations, and 19 that
they were satisfied; none said that they were dissatisfied
or somewhat dissatisfied. Reports of side effects listed in
Table 3 were comparable to those from
sildenafil clinical trials. Since data could be obtained only
from patients requesting refills, however, the sample may
not be fully representative. No patient has complained directly
to the Net Doctor International Ltd. via its web site. All
prescriptions list the name, address, and telephone number
of the dispensing pharmacy. The name of the prescribing physician
is included on each prescription and the dispensing pharmacy
has the physician's DEA number, state license, office address,
and telephone numbers. No pharmacy has contacted the Net Doctor
International Ltd. or its associated physicians concerning
patient complaints.
During this
same period, 36 patients obtained sildenafil prescriptions from the hospital
clinics. The type of medical information contained in the office-based
group's charts is summarized in Table 2. These patients'
medical records generally showed that blood pressure and pulse rate had
been recorded at least once during the previous six months (including
the index visit). Twenty of the 36 patients had received a general physical
examination during that period, but only 6 had had their height and weight
recorded and there was no record that any had received a rectal examination.
Eight clinic
patients were recorded as stating that their sex lives were poor and 4
as saying that there were times they were not impotent; these items were
not recorded on any of the other reviewed charts. No chart contained any
statement as to the quality of the patient's erection or whether the onset
of erectile dysfunction was gradual or sudden. Likewise, no chart recorded
either a blood lipid profile or any laboratory test relevant to diabetes.
The only medical conditions of note recorded in these patients' charts
were 4 instances of hypertension and 1 cerebrovascular accident. Just
16 of the 36 charts included a complete list of medications being taken
by the patient. Since the primary contraindications to sildenafil use
are certain concurrent medications, this is a significant omission. No
deaths or serious complications among patients using sildenafil have been
reported to the Net Doctor International Ltd., its associated private
physicians or independent pharmacies by any patient; patient family member;
attorneys representing the patient or their estate; or any local, state,
or federal governmental agency. The medical records of the clinic patients
had no indication of any adverse effects or death related to sildenafil
usage. Lastly, FDA and Pfizer surveillance systems have not reported any
deaths directly attributed to sildenafil. The possibility of unreported
deaths or complications cannot be completely ruled out.

[enlarge] |
Table
2.
Measurements and Conditions Noted in Medical Records of Clinic
Patients Receiving Sildenafil Prescriptions |
|
| X |

[enlarge] |
Table
3.
Information Reported by Patients Requesting Sildenafil Refills |
|
The
explosive popularity of sildenafil, and the demonstrated desire
of many patients to obtain this medication without a face-to-face
discussion of what they regard as intimate personal matters,
has brought to the fore the simmering question of Internet-based
medical advice and consultation. Concern has been expressed
by the Food and Drug Administration, members of the American
Medical Association's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs,
and the vice president of the Federation of State Medical
Boards.
Yet
sildenafil is only a small part of the changes currently in
progress. At least two groups are offering fee-for-service
Internet-based medical consultations on a wide variety of
conditions and many other physicians find themselves responding
to on-line requests for medical information and advice even
when that is not their officially stated policy. Indeed, medical
information on the Internet is proliferating so rapidly that
it has been the subject of an official report from a panel
convened by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
While this panel did not specifically address one-to-one communication
between physicians and patients, it did note many of the benefits,
such as greater willingness to engage in frank discussions
about health status, behavioral risks, and fears and uncertainties.
Advantages
and problems
Advantages
of Internet-based patient-physician communication when real-time contact
is not required include convenience for the patient and savings in both
time and office resources for the physician. Perhaps most importantly,
the computer interface greatly facilitates both obtaining and recording
a complete medical history. This conclusion is supported by our comparison
of medical history data from the Internet consultation form with that
from the charts of clinic patients. Due to the limited number of patients
and the limited clinical setting, our findings indicate the need for funding
further study and comparisons of physician directed Internet prescribing
versus traditional prescribing practice.
One objection
that has been raised to Internet-based consultation and prescribing is
that, as with the Net Doctor International Ltd., there is generally no
mechanism for providing a consultation report to the patient's primary
care physician. Several points need to be made. One is that, even in the
U.S., it cannot be assumed that all patients have a primary care physician.
A second is that many patients almost half of those seeking sildenafil
prescriptions are from outside the U.S.; they and their physicians
may have very different expectations regarding consultation reports. Third
and most significantly, a considerable fraction of the patients may have
sought Internet-based consultation because they did not want their usual
physician to know of their condition or of a specific sildenafil order.
For example, they may not wish their wife to know of the order and may
not fully trust the discretion of a physician who treats both family members.
Although this is regrettable, respect for patient autonomy requires that
there should be no attempt to contact the patient's primary care physician
without the patient's explicit permission.
This
latter point is also relevant to the frequently expressed
opinion that it is easier to assess a patient's truthfulness
in a face-to-face encounter. We are dealing here with patients
who have specifically chosen to seek a prescription from someone
other than their usual physician. In the absence of an established
relationship, mere physical propinquity would do little to
assure a complete and truthful medical and sexual history.
Indeed, the relative anonymity of the Internet may, in our
opinion, well increase patient truthfulness and openness.
Another objection sometimes raised is that Internet-based
practices, including the one described here, may not specifically
list the credentials of the associated physicians. However,
while physicians reviewing the site might find such information
reassuring, its usefulness to patients appears remote. With
rare exceptions, very few patients either understand or utilize
the data on physician credentials that are available to them.
Rather, they typically base their initial choice of physician
on friends' recommendations and on convenience. Those factors
remain valid in the context of Internet-based prescribing.
Can erectile
dysfunction be managed online?
Clearly,
not every medical condition is appropriately managed by Internet
encounters alone. Erectile dysfunction may be particularly
prominent among the appropriate conditions. Although objective
means exist for establishing the existence of erectile dysfunction
and for distinguishing between organic and psychogenic causes,
these tests are cumbersome and often omitted even from specialists'
most comprehensive recommendations. Indeed, there appears
to be little in the way of consensus as to what, if anything,
beyond the medical history might be appropriate in the diagnostic
work-up of erectile dysfunction. Recommendations that the
physical examination focus on signs of vascular and neurologic
disease, together with palpation of the penis for Peyronie's
disease and tests for atrophy are common. Except for detection
of Peyronie's disease, which can usually be elicited by a
thorough medical history, these observations are directed
primarily toward determining a cause for the dysfunction.
Prior to advent of sildenafil, the etiology of erectile dysfunction
rarely affected the choice of treatment. Consequently, Hakim
and Goldstein limit their recommended physical examination
to abnormal penile curvature and palpable corporal fibrosis.
Vinik
has noted that erectile dysfunction is often the presenting
symptom of diabetes and is also a marker for development of
generalized vascular disease and for myocardial infarction.
Godschalk et al recommend inclusion of a hemoglobin A1c and
a lipid profile in all work-ups for erectile dysfunction.
Similarly, Mobley and Baum recommend assessment of sacral
root function by means of a rectal examination that includes
evaluation of the bulbocavernosus reflex and of sphincter
tone. All three tests are absent from the recommended diagnostic
work-ups of other experts. Significantly, we found no mention
of them in the charts of any of the teaching hospital clinic
patients who received a sildenafil prescription.
One can conclude
that there is an almost total absence of expert consensus as to the essential
components of an erectile dysfunction work-up. The only area of agreement
is the importance of a complete medical and sexual history. Our observations
of practice in a Midwestern inner city teaching hospital clinic suggest
that physicians in this setting rely primarily on the history in deciding
whether a sildenafil prescription is appropriate. Yet we also find that
the medical and sexual history they obtain is less complete than that
obtained by the Net Doctor International Ltd..
Once
the physician has concluded that a sildenafil prescription
is appropriate, the next step is to instruct the patient in
the medication's proper and safe use. Although it is extremely
difficult to assess how well different physicians communicate
such instructions to their patients, many observations suggest
that physician-patient communication is often less than optimal.
It would presumably follow that many patients do not understand
the instructions they receive.
When oral
information is poorly expressed or poorly understood, the patient information
sheet becomes critical. As a comparison of Figures 2a and 2b shows, the
information sheet provided by the Net Doctor International Ltd. to its
Internet patients is far more thorough and complete, and perhaps more
comprehensible as well. Further, it is not the standard for pharmacists
to provide a specific patient instruction sheet when dispensing sildenafil.
Greater thoroughness may be particularly important given the intuitively
plausible assumption that Internet users as a group are likely to grasp
information more easily when it is presented in written rather than oral
form.
Are current
ethical codes and legislation too restrictive?
The American
Medical Association has noted that:
Telecommunications
advisory services, by way of phone, fax, or computer, can
be a helpful source of medical information for the public.
Often people are not sure where to turn for information
of a general medical nature or do not have easy access to
other sources of information. Individuals may also be embarrassed
about directly bringing up certain questions with their
physicians.
The
statement goes on to say: "Under no circumstances should
medications be prescribed." This dictum, which is currently
being revised, appears unduly restrictive. It may derive from
the belief that, without physical examination and laboratory
tests, the etiologic basis of a patient's complaint cannot
be identified. The point overlooked by this assumption is
that sildenafil is only one of many medications intended,
not to cure an etiology, but to relieve a symptom; symptoms
are normally diagnosed solely on the basis of patient histories.
The
ease with which the appropriateness of certain medications
may be assessed underlies the prescriptive authority sometimes
granted pharmacists, who are highly expert in medications
and their uses but have little or no diagnostic training.
As of 1996, 16 states plus the Indian Health Service and the
Department of Veterans Affairs allowed pharmacists to initiate
or modify drug therapy under certain conditions; similar legislation
was pending in 15 additional states. In almost all instances,
this authority was gained with the acquiescence of organized
physician groups.
Support
for pharmacists initiating drug therapy is greatest when the
condition being treated is diagnostically obvious. A 1993
survey of New York State internists and family practitioners
found that 64% of the physicians questioned supported pharmacists
providing a butoconazole vaginal cream for candidiasis and
61% supported pharmacists providing a steroid-containing rectal
suppository for hemorrhoid sufferers. Washington State allows
certain pharmacists to directly dispense emergency contraceptives.
And although Florida pharmacists are authorized to prescribe
approximately 30 types of medication, 82% of their prescriptions
fall into just three categories: topical pediculicides (lindane
shampoos), oral analgesics, and otic analgesics.
Neither
physicians nor the Food and Drug Administration, which in
recent years has approved the transfer of large numbers of
formerly prescription-only drugs to nonprescription status,
believe that every prescription drug calls for elaborate physician
physical examination and history. The clinic records from
the inner city teaching hospital we examined indicate that
some believe sildenafil may belong in this category. It might
well be argued that the only reason sildenafil requires a
prescription is the need for monitoring of contradictions
and potential drug interactions, plus the mistaken ideas many
patients hold about its indications and proper usage. This
study provides evidence that both monitoring and the provision
of patient information can be performed via the Internet at
least as well as, and perhaps better than, through a traditional
face-to-face physician-patient interview.
Cross-border
issues
Concerns
have been expressed about the potential availability to patients
of drugs not yet approved in their countries of residence.
That this is a very real possibility is shown by the experience
of the Net Doctor International Ltd.: 44.4% of the sildenafil
prescriptions were issued to patients in 8 different non-U.S.
countries. The concern is not truly limited to Internet-based
prescribing: many Canadians crossed the border to obtain sildenafil
from U.S. pharmacies prior to the medication's availability
in their own country.
A large number
of countries allow patients to import small amounts of nationally unapproved
medications for their personal use. The question is whether individuals'
increased ability to obtain nationally unapproved drugs without physically
traveling outside their country of residence calls for changes in the
law.
Conclusion
Our results
support Internet-based prescription (IBP) of sildenafil utilizing a physician
designed and controlled information and decision system. The Internet-based
prescribing physician consistently has more, not less, clinically relevant
and useful information than was typically obtained and utilized in a specific
hospital clinic setting. The data suggest that contrary too conventional
thought, there is no evidence of compromise to patient safety. This statement
is made with the important limitation that our study utilized only passive
means to document patient adverse reactions or complaints. Our web site
is available for comments 24 hours a day every day of the year. No negative
feedback from patients using sildenafil was noted. Established monitoring
systems operated by the FDA, Pfizer, local and state governments are actively
gathering data. As of the current date we have served over 5100 patients
and have received only one complaint from a patient (the patient had a
history of asthma and was distressed that he was granted a prescription,
he had been advised by a physician "acquaintance" it was unsafe
for him to use sildenafil). While our patients represent a minute proportion
of all patients using sildenafil, we expect the aforementioned external
event tracking systems would detect any significant variation in the expected
outcomes of our patients. Based on the significant lack of spontaneous
and voluntarily recorded complaints and the overwhelmingly positive comments
of patients seeking refills, patients appear to be satisfied with our
approach. IBP is associated with extremely low demands on health care
resources and maximum responsiveness to patient needs. Health care standards
and governmental regulatory efforts to date have not been based on objective
or experimental evidence. They have significantly lagged behind the capabilities
and implementation of Internet prescribing systems. We hope that data
from this first large, objective scientific study can serve as a starting
point for development of fact based, meaningful standards and regulations.
We encourage further and broader evaluation of physician-designed and
controlled Internet prescribing systems.
Acknowledgements
We
thank W. A. Thomasson, PhD, for expert assistance in preparation of the
manuscript.
Conflict
of Interest
Miles
Jones, MD serves as the medical director for Net Doctor International
and owner of Consultative & Diagnostic Pathology, Inc. Consultative
& Diagnostic Pathology receives compensation from Net Doctor International
for each medical review provided by Dr. Jones. Dr. Jones personally owns
180 shares of Pfizer stock.
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Submitted
11.09.00, peer-reviewed by John Grohol, reviewers comments to
author 18.01.01, accepted 18.01.01, published 31.01.01.
Please
cite as:
Jones M. Internet-based Prescription of Sildenafil: A 2104-Patient
Series.
Journal of Medical Internet Research 2001;3(1):e2
<URL: http://www.jmir.org/2001/1/e2/>
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