With doctors seeking gag orders on patients who use their service to stop them from presenting negative doctor ratings about them, the reality is that the sooner doctors accept these online doctor ratings sites, the better their own patient satisfaction will become. Using the company Medical Justice, is just a waste of time and money and not in a million years will a lawsuit succeed against a patients First Amendment Rights. My $0.02 is that if you want to have a thriving practice, listen to your patients, in which in this case is your customer and you won’t have to worry about any negative comments. So save your money for better customer service and leave the snake oil lawyers at Medical Justice, whose time maybe better spent at chasing ambulances.

Doctor Ratings Medical Justice

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4 Comments so far

  1. ZDNet Healthcare mobile edition | 04 March 2009, 12:36

    [...] they’re not regulated and can do doctors great harm. Advocates of getting doctors online are aghast. MyDocHub calls it an attack on First Amendment rights, while ePatients.Net calls the whole thing repulsive. [...]

  2. Shut Up and Take Your Medicine « Later On | 07 March 2009, 12:14

    [...] that patients rights advocates are angry at the attempt to stifle patients’ speech: “MyDocHub calls it an attack on First Amendment rights, while ePatients.Net calls it an ‘almost comical [...]

  3. Medical Justice Aka Censorship Profiteer : MyDocHub Blog - Online Health Community | 10 March 2009, 13:24

    [...] has been much news about the company Medical Justice, a company that protects doctors from the ratings and reviews of their patients. My $0.02 of [...]

  4. Are Patient EULAs Worth It? | MyDocHub Blog - Online Health Community | 08 May 2009, 09:13

    [...] story about Medical Justice, a company that helps doctors avoid consumer ratings, is surely not going away anytime soon. But my [...]