The 13-year-old company has introduced a free service called DocDefender that can scrub a physician's personal contact information from the internet.
The technology scans dozens of the most common websites where a doctor's information might reside and automatically initiates the removal process.
Two months after the workshopping event, Doximity conducted a survey of more than 2,000 doctors and found that 85% of them worry about whether patients will access their personal information online.
The service will be available to all doctors on Doximity starting Wednesday, and will expand to nurse practitioners and others over time.
'Opportunity to think very long term' In addition to reaching more than 80% of U.S. doctors, Doximity says it's also used by 50% of nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
Persons:
that's, Doximity, Amit Phull, We've, Phull, Jeff Tangney, he's, I've, it's, Azlan Tariq
Organizations:
New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, CNBC
Locations:
San Francisco, Doximity, Chicago