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The Wisdom of Patients: Health Care Meets Online Social MediaTHINK-Health Publication DateApril 2008
SummaryThis document, prepared for the California Healthcare Foundation, addresses the function of social media on the internet as a source of emotional support for patients and as a source of information to help them manage health conditions. According to the author, "The collective wisdom harnessed by social media can yield insights well beyond the knowledge of any single patient or physician." As the internet has moved from being an information-based resource to being a commons for generating and sharing content in and beyond social networks, this document contends that a new movement, labelled "Health 2.0”, has arisen that challenges the notion that health care happens only in a patient-doctor relationship. It suggests that collaborations online are changing the way patients, providers, and researchers learn about therapeutic regimens and disease management. According to this document, more people in the United States (US) accessed health information via the internet than via physicians in January of 2008. The high volume of consumer internet usage on health conditions is not only due to accessing health information, but also personal connections and stories of health conditions. Research supports the social network structure, even before the advent of the internet, as a way to improve health outcomes, including those in a wide range of conditions from heart failure to post partum depression to preoperative pain and anxiety. Internet tools are increasing the opportunities for social networking. Because the internet is convening people with shared concerns and creating health information relevant to consumers, the author proposes that a new social phenomenon called “Health 2.0" is being generated from the power of collective wisdom - "clinical insights well beyond that of any single patient or physician". Research quoted here states that consumers' relationships with traditional medical authorities are shifting to trust in social networks. According to the report, the growing demand for transparency will drive the evolution of social media in health. Community editing of false or misleading information is already taking place because consumers, or "prosumers", as named in the article, can access a variety of information sources, use their networks to reconfirm their findings, and then ask for corrections of misinformation and/or disseminate the correct information through their networks. ContactJane Sarasohn-Kahn
Placed on the Communication Initiative site May 13 2008 Last Updated May 14 2008 Top 5 Related Pages for this Summary |
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