• 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 8, No 3 (2006)
  • 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 8, No 3 (2006)


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

Guest Editorial

Is E-health Progressing Faster Than E-health Researchers?

Henry W. W. Potts

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e24

HTML PDF XML Abstract

Formal Internet interventions exist in a broad context of diverse online health resources, which share elements in common like information, advice and peer support. However, most online health resources are not created by healthcare professionals. Internet interventions need to be designed to “compete” in that wider context. The democratization of production and distribution is central to the transformative effect of the Internet on society, yet potentially conflicts with...

Original Papers

Internet Interventions for Long-Term Conditions: Patient and Caregiver Quality Criteria

Cicely Kerr, Elizabeth Murray, Fiona Stevenson, Charles Gore, Irwin Nazareth

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Jul 28); 8(3):e13

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Interactive health communication applications (IHCAs) that combine high-quality health information with interactive components, such as self-assessment tools, behavior change support, peer support, or decision support, are likely to benefit people with long-term conditions. IHCAs are now largely Web-based and are becoming known as "Internet interventions." Although there are numerous professionally generated criteria to assess health-related websites, to date there has been scant...

Interest in an Online Smoking Cessation Program and Effective Recruitment Strategies: Results From Project Quit

Jennifer B McClure, Sarah M Greene, Cheryl Wiese, Karin E Johnson, Gwen Alexander, Victor Strecher

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Aug 22); 8(3):e14

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Internet is a promising venue for delivering smoking cessation treatment, either as a stand-alone program or as an adjunct to pharmacotherapy. However, there is little data to indicate what percent of smokers are interested in receiving online smoking cessation services or how best to recruit smokers to Internet-based programs. OBJECTIVE: Using a defined recruitment sample, this study aimed to identify the percentage of smokers who expressed interest in or enrolled in Project...

Defining Participant Exposure Measures in Web-Based Health Behavior Change Programs

Brian G Danaher, Shawn M Boles, Laura Akers, Judith S Gordon, Herbert H Severson

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Aug 30); 8(3):e15

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Published research on the use of Web-based behavior change programs is growing rapidly. One of the observations characterized as problematic in these studies is that participants often make relatively few website visits and spend only a brief time accessing the program. Properly structured websites permit the unobtrusive measurement of the ways in which participants access (are exposed to) program content. Research on participant exposure to Web-based programs is not merely of...

Characterizing Internet Searchers of Smoking Cessation Information

Nathan K Cobb, Amanda L Graham

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 19); 8(3):e17

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Internet is a viable channel to deliver evidence-based smoking cessation treatment that has the potential to make a large population impact on reducing smoking prevalence. There is high demand for smoking cessation information and support on the Internet. Approximately 7% (10.2 million) of adult American Internet users have searched for information on quitting smoking. Little is known about these individuals, their smoking status, what type of cessation services they are...

Are Physicians Ready for Patients With Internet-Based Health Information?

Farah Ahmad, Pamela L Hudak, Kim Bercovitz, Elisa Hollenberg, Wendy Levinson

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e22

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: An increasing number of patients bring Internet-based health information to medical consultations. However, little is known about how physicians experience, manage, and view these patients. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to advance the understanding of the effects of incorporating Internet-based health information into routine medical consultations from physicians’ perspectives, using a qualitative approach. METHODS: Six focus groups were conducted with 48 family physicians...

Short Paper

Responding Rapidly to FDA Drug Withdrawals: Design and Application of a New Approach for a Consumer Health Website

Peter J Embi, Prasad Acharya, Mark McCuistion, Charles P Kishman, Doris Haag, Stephen Marine

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 06); 8(3):e16

HTML PDF XML Abstract

BACKGROUND: Information about drug withdrawals may not reach patients in a timely manner, and this could result in adverse events. Increasingly, the public turns to consumer health websites for health information, but such sites may not update their content for days or weeks following important events like Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drug withdrawal actions. There is no recognized standard for how quickly consumer health websites should respond to such events, and reports addressing...

Viewpoint

Directions for the International Society for Research on Internet Interventions (ISRII)

Lee M Ritterband, Gerhard Andersson, Helen M Christensen, Per Carlbring, Pim Cuijpers

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e23

HTML PDF XML Abstract

In 2004, the International Society for Research on Internet Interventions (ISRII) was formed to encourage eHealth researchers to collaborate in their efforts to further the science behind developing, testing, and disseminating Web-based treatment programs. The group held its second meeting (April 2006) to clarify the Society’s direction and identify key issues that need addressing in the field. These issues are identified and examined in the current paper. Given the success of using the...

Letters

Internet Interventions or Patient Education Web sites?

Lee M Ritterband, Frances Thorndike

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e18

HTML PDF XML Abstract

Internet Interventions or Patient Education Web Sites? – Author’s Reply

Cicely Kerr, Elizabeth Murray, Fiona Stevenson, Charles Gore, Irwin Nazareth

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e19

HTML PDF XML Abstract

The Law of Attrition Revisited

Helen Christensen, Andrew Mackinnon

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e20

HTML PDF XML Abstract

The Law of Attrition Revisited – Author’s Reply

Gunther Eysenbach

J Med Internet Res 2006 (Sep 29); 8(3):e21

HTML PDF XML Abstract