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The One-Star Review You Can't Remove — And What It's Actually Doing to Your Practice

Posted By Dwayne McGowan | June 24, 2026

A patient leaves a one-star review. You know they were never actually unhappy with the care. They went to the wrong location — your old address, still live on a directory you forgot about — waited, gave up, and blamed you. Now the review sits on your Google profile, and you can't get it taken down because technically, from Google's perspective, it describes a real experience.

This is not a rare scenario. It happens to medical practices every week, and most of them don't find out until someone mentions it in passing — or until they Google themselves.

Why Bad Reviews Stick (Even When They're Wrong)

Google's review removal policy is narrow. Reviews can be removed if they contain hate speech, personal information, or clear conflicts of interest. "Patient showed up at wrong location due to outdated listing data" does not qualify. The review stays.

What makes this worse is the asymmetry of impact. Research on consumer behavior consistently shows that negative reviews carry more weight than positive ones. A single one-star review can offset the influence of multiple five-star reviews, particularly when it's recent or when the response (if any) is defensive.

The Root Cause: Listing Data You Don't Control

The outdated address problem is almost never the practice's fault in a straightforward way. You updated your Google Business Profile when you moved. But there are dozens of other directories — Yelp, Healthgrades, Zocdoc, WebMD, Vitals, insurance provider directories, hospital affiliation pages — that pull and redistribute your practice information independently.

Some of them sourced your old address years ago and never updated it. Some of them don't allow you to claim or edit your own listing. Some of them feed data to other platforms, meaning one stale record can propagate across multiple sites.

The patient who went to the wrong location didn't make a mistake. They followed the information the internet gave them.

What You Can Do

Audit your full listing footprint

Start by searching for your practice name on Google, Yelp, Healthgrades, WebMD, and your insurance carrier's provider directory. Compare the address, phone number, and hours on each one against your current information. Note every discrepancy.

Respond to the review strategically

You can't remove the review, but you can respond. A response that acknowledges the frustration, clarifies the listing error, and shows you've corrected it does two things: it signals to future patients reading the review that the problem was a data error, not a care problem, and it demonstrates that your practice pays attention and responds.

Request removal only when policy-compliant

If you can demonstrate that the reviewer never actually visited your practice (because they went to an old location you no longer operate), it's worth requesting a review removal through Google's process. Success is not guaranteed, but it's worth attempting.

Accelerate legitimate positive reviews

The most durable response to a one-star anomaly is a healthy volume of verified positive reviews. A systematic approach — asking satisfied patients at checkout, following up with a text the day after their visit, and making the link easy to find — shifts the overall rating and reduces the relative weight of outlier reviews.

Not sure how your practice listing looks across the internet? Get a free audit at contensive.com/free-medical-website-audit

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