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    Most Doctors Ignore Paid Search to Access Health Content: comScore

    Written by

    Brian T. Horowitz
    Published March 14, 2011
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      Doctors are more likely to use natural, or organic, search and direct navigation to find their online health resources compared with paid search listings, a report by Web analytics and research firm comScore reveals.

      Marketers buy paid search listings, which appear in a blue or yellow background at the top of Google search results, while natural, or nonpaid, search results generated by Google’s algorithm appear below the paid results.

      Doctors have a very specific goal in mind when searching for health information online compared with patients, and this criteria leads physicians to click on natural search results, according to John Mangano, comScore’s vice president of health marketing solutions.

      “These guys are using the Internet in ways that are trendy, relevant and growing, and in some ways using it more than the average American,” Mangano told eWEEK.

      While a patient may search for the general term “cholesterol,” which leads to a few paid links, a doctor may get more specific with a search like “triglycerides in Italian-Americans.”

      “If you put in a search like that, organic search is going to be more likely to deliver the kind of answer you’re looking for,” Mangano explained. “Paid search is not as detailed.”

      Since search terms for Web content compiled by government resources are not paid, doctors will also tend to rely on the authoritative content of sites like that of the National Institutes of Health. The first natural search results on Google for pharmaceutical items are government content, and the search engine signifies the NIH content with a red and blue pill icon. Google uses what looks like a gray pill box with a red outline for non-pharmaceutical NIH searches for other terms like “malaria.”

      “Government content is good because there are certain things that the government has; there’s content that you can’t get anywhere else, like on the CDC site,” Mangano said.

      Doctors also dive in quickly in health care search, find very specific details they’re looking for to inform patients-like the side effects of a medication-and then get off, Mangano noted.

      “It’s not as heavy as research; it’s more of an info snack you need at that moment before moving on,” he said.

      With doctors searching in an organic way, rather than using paid search, the research shows that companies need to build brand awareness and effective SEO strategies to attract physicians to their Websites, comScore reports.

      Brian T. Horowitz
      Brian T. Horowitz
      Brian T. Horowitz is a technology and health writer as well as a copy editor. Brian has worked on the tech beat since 1996 and covered health care IT and rugged mobile computing for eWEEK since 2010. He has contributed to more than 20 publications, including Computer Shopper, Fast Company, FOXNews.com, More, NYSE Magazine, Parents, ScientificAmerican.com, USA Weekend and Womansday.com, as well as other consumer and trade publications.

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