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Vol 10, No 3 (2008) - Medicine 2.0 Theme Issue: Web 2.0 in Health, Health Care, Medicine, and Biomedical Research


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Editorial

Medicine 2.0: Social Networking, Collaboration, Participation, Apomediation, and Openness

Gunther Eysenbach

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Aug 25); 10(3):e22

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In a very significant development for eHealth, a broad adoption of Web 2.0 technologies and approaches coincides with the more recent emergence of Personal Health Application Platforms and Personally Controlled Health Records such as Google Health, Microsoft HealthVault, and Dossia. “Medicine 2.0” applications, services and tools are defined as Web-based services for health care consumers, caregivers, patients, health professionals, and biomedical researchers, that use Web 2.0...

Review

Health 2.0 and Medicine 2.0: Tensions and Controversies in the Field

Benjamin Hughes, Indra Joshi, Jonathan Wareham

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Aug 06); 10(3):e23

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Background: The term Web 2.0 became popular following the O’Reilly Media Web 2.0 conference in 2004; however, there are difficulties in its application to health and medicine. Principally, the definition published by O’Reilly is criticized for being too amorphous, where other authors claim that Web 2.0 does not really exist. Despite this skepticism, the online community using Web 2.0 tools for health continues to grow, and the term Medicine 2.0 has entered popular nomenclature....

Versatile, Immersive, Creative and Dynamic Virtual 3-D Healthcare Learning Environments: A Review of the Literature

Margaret Hansen

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Sep 01); 10(3):e26

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The author provides a critical overview of three-dimensional (3-D) virtual worlds and “serious gaming” that are currently being developed and used in healthcare professional education and medicine. The relevance of this e-learning innovation for teaching students and professionals is debatable and variables influencing adoption, such as increased knowledge, self-directed learning, and peer collaboration, by academics, healthcare professionals, and business executives are examined while...

Original Papers

Social Uses of Personal Health Information Within PatientsLikeMe, an Online Patient Community: What Can Happen When Patients Have Access to One Another’s Data

Jeana Frost, Michael Massagli

J Med Internet Res 2008 (May 27); 10(3):e15

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Background: This project investigates the ways in which patients respond to the shared use of what is often considered private information: personal health data. There is a growing demand for patient access to personal health records. The predominant model for this record is a repository of all clinically relevant health information kept securely and viewed privately by patients and their health care providers. While this type of record does seem to have beneficial effects for the...

Facebook for Scientists: Requirements and Services for Optimizing How Scientific Collaborations Are Established

Titus Schleyer, Heiko Spallek, Brian Butler, Sushmita Subramanian, Daniel Weiss, M. Poythress, Phijarana Rattanathikun, Gregory Mueller

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Aug 13); 10(3):e24

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Background: As biomedical research projects become increasingly interdisciplinary and complex, collaboration with appropriate individuals, teams, and institutions becomes ever more crucial to project success. While social networks are extremely important in determining how scientific collaborations are formed, social networking technologies have not yet been studied as a tool to help form scientific collaborations. Many currently emerging expertise locating systems include social networking...

SOMWeb: A Semantic Web-Based System for Supporting Collaboration of Distributed Medical Communities of Practice

Göran Falkman, Marie Gustafsson, Mats Jontell, Olof Torgersson

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Aug 26); 10(3):e25

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Background: Information technology (IT) support for remote collaboration of geographically distributed communities of practice (CoP) in health care must deal with a number of sociotechnical aspects of communication within the community. In the mid-1990s, participants of the Swedish Oral Medicine Network (SOMNet) began discussing patient cases in telephone conferences. The cases were distributed prior to the conferences using PowerPoint and email. For the technical support of online CoP,...

Examining the Medical Blogosphere: An Online Survey of Medical Bloggers

Ivor Kovic, Ileana Lulic, Gordana Brumini

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Sep 23); 10(3):e28

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Background: Blogs are the major contributors to the large increase of new websites created each year. Most blogs allow readers to leave comments and, in this way, generate both conversation and encourage collaboration. Despite their popularity, however, little is known about blogs or their creators. Objectives: To contribute to a better understanding of the medical blogosphere by investigating the characteristics of medical bloggers and their blogs, including bloggers’ Internet and...

Viewpoint

A Second Life for eHealth: Prospects for the Use of 3-D Virtual Worlds in Clinical Psychology

Alessandra Gorini, Andrea Gaggioli, Giuseppe Riva

J Med Internet Res 2008 (Aug 05); 10(3):e21

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The aim of the present paper is to describe the role played by three-dimensional (3-D) virtual worlds in eHealth applications, addressing some potential advantages and issues related to the use of this emerging medium in clinical practice. Due to the enormous diffusion of the World Wide Web (WWW), telepsychology, and telehealth in general, have become accepted and validated methods for the treatment of many different health care concerns. The introduction of the Web 2.0 has facilitated the...