When Patients Bring Google to the Bedside

Google at the Bedside: A Nurse’s Approach to Internet-Informed Patients

In today’s digital age, it’s common for patients to arrive at the hospital or clinic with a self-diagnosis in hand, a result of access to online research. In 2022, 58.5% of adults seeked health information online. While in many cases a Google search may provide patients with enough information to determine what may be causing their health concerns, more often incomplete and misleading health information leads to wildly inaccurate self-diagnoses. This trend poses obvious challenges for health care personnel, however if nurses approach these situations with empathy and effective comminication, opportunities to build trust, strengthen the nurse-patient relationship, and provide valuable patient education are uncovered.

Why Patients Seek Health Information Online

The internet is a quick reference tool that empowers individuals with knowledge about their health. Some reasons patients may perform an internet search for health information include: 

  • Convenience
  • Anxiety or worry
  • Lack of access to a healthcare provider
  • Simple curiosity

While it seems advantageous for health information to be so accessible, search engine results expose patients to unreliable sources, sensationalized content, and worst-case scenarios that heighten fear. Nurses must recognize the motivations behind individuals obtaining information through the digital health space and help them find not only the desired information, but information that is evidence based and helpful.

The Challenges of Self-Diagnosis

When patients arrive at a healthcare facility convinced of a diagnosis they found online, it can create tension in the nurse-patient relationship. Common challenges nurses face due to a patient’s online research include:

  • Heightened anxiety due to alarming online content
  • Resistance to professional assessments and treatments that conflict with the patient’s research
  • Delays in care caused by patient insistence on unnecessary tests or treatments
  • Spread of misinformation to family members or community networks

Recognizing these challenges is the first step toward addressing them constructively.

5 Strategies to Address a Patient’s Self-Diagnosis

Rather than dismissing patient concerns for internet search results, nurses can turn these encounters into an opportunity for teaching and collaboration by using these strategies.

1. Validate the Patient’s Effort

Nurses should acknowledge the patients’ initiative for trying to understand and address their health concerns. Use simple statements like, “I can see you’ve been doing your own research, let’s look at this together” to validate the patient’s effort and open the discussion for professional guidance.

2. Provide Reliable Information

Patients should be given reliable information and taught the specific tools and research skills necessary to find trustworthy health information online on their own. When nurses share these techniques, patients receive less misinformation and build confidence in finding reliable sources when seeking information in the future.

Teach patients to assess the credibility of internet resources by asking these questions:

  • Is this information published by an organization, hospital, or educational agency? Check for .gov, .edu, .org in the website link
  • Was this written and or reviewed by experts on the subject? Seek information written or reviewed by health care professionals and individuals licensed or credientialed in a specific field
  • Is this information recent and updated? Find information that has been written or updated within 3 years

Remind patients to be leery of quick fixes or easy solutions to medical conditions they find online and content that is tied to sponsorships or payments for posting.

3. Support Concepts and Fill Gaps With Nursing Expertise

Even the best information on the internet leaves openings for you to build on your patients’ knowledge. You should first listen to what information they have and then use your nursing knowledge to:

  • Explain why certain symptoms require professional evaluation
  • Highlight red flags that online tools may overlook
  • Clarify differences between possibilities and probabilities in diagnosis.

4. Build Trust Through Communication

Individuals are more likely to accept professional recommendations when there’s an established nurse-patient relationship built on trust, even when the recommendations differ from online findings. Nurses must incorporate essential communication techniques including: active listening, empathy, and clear explanations in conversations about self-diagnoses and health concerns. By engaging patients respectfully, nurses reduce defensiveness and foster collaboration.



5. Collaborate With the Healthcare Team

It’s crucial for nurses to communicate patient concerns to the healthcare team to ensure physicians and specialists are aware of self-diagnosis beliefs and address patient’s concerns directly. This practice of shared decision making—a collaboration of the healthcare team with the patient—helps align messaging and provides consistent patient-centered care.

The growing trend for internet-informed patients is likely to continue, especially with the use of Artificial Intelligence tools and increasing platforms for digital health. Rather than competing with Google and search results, nurses should view online health information and patient research as a starting point for conversation. By guiding patients toward accurate information and reinforcing professional expertise, nurses can help transform online searching into a tool for engagement, not confusion.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why do patients self-diagnose using internet search engines like Google?
Patients want quick answers and explanations for their symptoms so they turn to online search engines for instant results and reassurance rather than waiting for an appointment or lab results from a medical professional.

2. How should nurses respond when patients insist on a self-diagnosis?
Nurses should have empathy and validate the patient’s desire to learn more about their health while also clarifying information by providing evidence-based explanations. 

3. Can online research ever be helpful for patients?
Yes, when patients use credible and trustworthy sources, online research can increase engagement and promote proactive health behaviors.

Nurse helping patient with their phone

4. What risks come with self-diagnosis?
Misinformation, unnecessary anxiety, delayed care, and inappropriate treatment choices are common risks associated with self-diagnosis. 

5. How can nurses guide patients to reliable health information?
By recommending trusted websites, providing hospital-approved resources, and encouraging open dialogue.

References

National Center for Health Statistics. “Health Information Technology Use Among Adults: United States July -December 2022.” October 31, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db482.htm

National Institute of Aging. “How to Find Reliable Health Information Online.” January 12, 2023. https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/healthy-aging/how-find-reliable-health-information-online

Sepucha PhD, Karen. “What is Shared Decision Making?”. Mass General Brigham. March 12, 2025. https://www.massgeneralbrigham.org/en/about/newsroom/articles/shared-decision-making

Author Bio

Caitlin Pratz, MSN-RN headshot

Caitlin Pratz, MSN-RN

Caitlin Pratz, MSN-RN, is a registered nurse who brings over 14 years of clinical experience in different settings including: med-surg, school nursing, and primary care to her writing. She aims to improve health literacy and health outcomes by bringing evidence-based insights to patients and health care providers bridging gaps between complex medical information and accessible, actionable knowledge.

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