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    <entry>
        <title>Health Care Meets Online Social Media</title>
    
    
    
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        <published>2008-05-13T18:59:14Z</published>
        <updated>2008-05-13T18:59:14Z</updated>
    
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            <p>Social media on the Internet are empowering, engaging, and educating
health care consumers and providers. While consumers use social media
-- including social networks, personal blogging, wikis, video-sharing,
and other formats -- for emotional support, they also heavily rely on
them to manage health conditions. </p><p>
The Internet has evolved from the information-retrieval of “Web 1.0” to
“Web 2.0,” which allows people who are not necessarily technologically
savvy to generate and share content. The collective wisdom harnessed by
social media can yield insights well beyond the knowledge of any single
patient or physician, writes report author Jane Sarasohn-Kahn. The
outcome of this development is “Health 2.0” -- a new movement that
challenges the notion that health care happens only between a single
patient and doctor in an exam room. </p><p>
Using examples, this report describes how the Web is becoming a
platform for convening people with shared concerns and creating health
information that is more relevant to consumers. Social networks,
ranging from MySpace to specific disease-oriented sites, are
proliferating so rapidly that new services are already under
development to help health consumers navigate through the networks. </p><p>
The report details how innovative collaborations online are changing
the way patients, providers, and researchers learn about therapeutic
regimens and disease management. It examines the benefits and concerns
regarding Health 2.0 and it also includes an extensive listing of
health media resources. </p><p>
According to the report, the growing demand for transparency will drive
the evolution of social media in health. A growing array of tools will
become available that are increasingly mobile, as well as personal
health data storage in commercial products like Microsoft Health Vault,
Google Health, and others. The author concludes that the ongoing
demands of a consumer-driven health marketplace will inspire innovation
in applications that integrate clinical, financial, and ratings
information.</p><p><a href="http://www.chcf.org/topics/chronicdisease/index.cfm?itemID=133631">The complete report is available here</a>  </p>
        
    
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