• Home
  • About
  • Log In
  • Register
  • Search
  • Upcoming
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • Subscribe
  • Submit
  • Open Review
  • Become Member
  • Top Articles
  • Protocols
  • Mhealth
  • Feedback
  • Jobs
Home > Archives > Vol 7, No 5 (2005)
  • Previous Issue
  • Next Issue
Medicine 2.0 congress
Journal Content Current Issue Upcoming Issue
2013 (vol. 15)
2012 (vol. 14)
2011 (vol. 13)
2010 (vol. 12)
2009 (vol. 11)
2008 (vol. 10)
2007 (vol. 9)
2006 (vol. 8)
2005 (vol. 7)
2004 (vol. 6)
2003 (vol. 5)
2002 (vol. 4)
2001 (vol. 3)
2000 (vol. 2)
1999 (vol. 1)

Browse
  • By Issue
  • By Author
  • By Title
  • By Theme
User Not logged in.
   Log In here
No account?
   Register for free
original feed Subscribe Feed

Vol 7, No 5 (2005)


Members can download this full issue for Adobe PDF Format.
Membership provides unlimited access to all PDF files.
Or, ask your department head to become an institutional member.

For tax purposes please select your country and if applicable state/province of residence:
Buy Now (Pay-per-download for non-members):
Download Price (USD): $80.00

Editorial

Going, Going, Still There: Using the WebCite Service to Permanently Archive Cited Web Pages

Gunther Eysenbach, Mathieu Trudel

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Dec 30); 7(5):e60

HTML PDF XML Abstract

Scholars are increasingly citing electronic “web references” which are not preserved in libraries or full text archives. WebCite is a new standard for citing web references. To “webcite” a document involves archiving the cited Web page through www.webcitation.org and citing the WebCite permalink instead of (or in addition to) the unstable live Web page. This journal has amended its “instructions for authors” accordingly, asking authors to archive cited Web...

Original Papers

Computers and the Internet: Tools for Youth Empowerment

Ruta K Valaitis

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Oct 04); 7(5):e51

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Youth are often disenfranchised in their communities and may feel they have little voice. Since computers are an important aspect of youth culture, they may offer solutions to increasing youth participation in communities. OBJECTIVE: This qualitative case study investigated the perceptions of 19 (predominantly female) inner-city school youth about their use of computers and the Internet in a school-based community development project. METHODS: Youth working with public health...

Architecture for Knowledge-Based and Federated Search of Online Clinical Evidence

Enrico Coiera, Martin Walther, Ken Nguyen, Nigel H Lovell

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Oct 24); 7(5):e52

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is increasingly difficult for clinicians to keep up-to-date with the rapidly growing biomedical literature. Online evidence retrieval methods are now seen as a core tool to support evidence-based health practice. However, standard search engine technology is not designed to manage the many different types of evidence sources that are available or to handle the very different information needs of various clinical groups, who often work in widely different settings. OBJECTIVES:...

Comparative Case Study of Two Biomedical Research Collaboratories

Titus KL Schleyer, Stephanie D Teasley, Rishi Bhatnagar

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Oct 25); 7(5):e53

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Working together efficiently and effectively presents a significant challenge in large-scale, complex, interdisciplinary research projects. Collaboratories are a nascent method to help meet this challenge. However, formal collaboratories in biomedical research centers are the exception rather than the rule. OBJECTIVE: The main purpose of this paper is to compare and describe two collaboratories that used off-the-shelf tools and relatively modest resources to support the...

What Is eHealth (5): A Research Agenda for eHealth Through Stakeholder Consultation and Policy Context Review

Ray Jones, Ray Rogers, Jean Roberts, Lynne Callaghan, Laura Lindsey, John Campbell, Margaret Thorogood, Graham Wright, Nick Gaunt, Chris Hanks, Graham R Williamson

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Nov 10); 7(5):e54

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: In 2003, the National Health Service in England and Wales, despite its large investment in information and communication technology, had not set a national research agenda. The National Health Service has three main research and development programs: one is the Service Delivery and Organisation program, commissioned in 2003, and the others are two parallel “scoping exercises” to help set a research agenda. This paper reports on one of those projects. A parallel...

Website Quality Indicators for Consumers

Kathleen M Griffiths, Helen Christensen

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Nov 15); 7(5):e55

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: The rating tool DISCERN was designed for use by consumers without content expertise to evaluate the quality of health information. There is some evidence that DISCERN may be a valid indicator of evidence-based website quality when applied by health professionals. However, it is not known if the tool is a valid measure of evidence-based quality when used by consumers. Since it is a lengthy instrument requiring training in its use, DISCERN may prove impractical for use by the...

Feasibility of Adding Enhanced Pedometer Feedback to Nutritional Counseling for Weight Loss

Caroline R Richardson, Beverley B Brown, Sharon Foley, Kathleen S Dial, Julie C Lowery

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Nov 17); 7(5):e56

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Intensive interventions targeting diet and physical activity are effective for weight reduction but are costly. Tailored, computer-generated, step-count feedback may provide an intensive and affordable way to increase the physical activity of people at high risk for cardiovascular disease. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to test the feasibility of adding tailored, computer-generated, step-count feedback to a face-to-face nutritional counseling weight loss intervention. METHODS: We...

Parent-Child Interaction Using a Mobile and Wireless System for Blood Glucose Monitoring

Deede Gammon, Eirik Årsand, Ole Anders Walseth, Niklas Andersson, Martin Jenssen, Ted Taylor

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Nov 21); 7(5):e57

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children with type 1 diabetes and their parents face rigorous procedures for blood glucose monitoring and regulation. Mobile telecommunication systems show potential as an aid for families’ self-management of diabetes. OBJECTIVE: A prototype designed to automatically transfer readings from a child’s blood glucose monitor to their parent’s mobile phone was tested. In this formative stage of development, we sought insights into the appropriateness of the concept,...

Automated Assessment of the Quality of Depression Websites

Kathleen M Griffiths, Thanh Tin Tang, David Hawking, Helen Christensen

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Dec 30); 7(5):e59

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Since health information on the World Wide Web is of variable quality, methods are needed to assist consumers to identify health websites containing evidence-based information. Manual assessment tools may assist consumers to evaluate the quality of sites. However, these tools are poorly validated and often impractical. There is a need to develop better consumer tools, and in particular to explore the potential of automated procedures for evaluating the quality of health...

Viewpoint

A Historical Overview of Health Disparities and the Potential of eHealth Solutions

Michael C Gibbons

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Oct 04); 7(5):e50

HTML PDF XML Abstract

Over the past decade, a rapidly expanding body of literature has demonstrated the existence of disparities in health and health care. While consensus has not emerged regarding the causes of disparities, they are generally thought to be related to sociocultural, behavioral, economic, environmental, biologic, or societal factors. To effectively address disparities, several authorities have suggested the need for greater information technology research and investments. eHealth researchers may be...

Mobile eHealth Interventions for Obesity: A Timely Opportunity to Leverage Convergence Trends

James T Tufano, Bryant T Karras

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Dec 20); 7(5):e58

HTML PDF XML Abstract

Obesity is often cited as the most prevalent chronic health condition and highest priority public health problem in the United States. There is a limited but growing body of evidence suggesting that mobile eHealth behavioral interventions, if properly designed, may be effective in promoting and sustaining successful weight loss and weight maintenance behavior changes. This paper reviews the current literature on the successes and failures of public health, provider-administered, and...