Mobile Health 2012
Half of smartphone owners use their devices to get health information and one-fifth of smartphone owners have health apps
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Half of smartphone owners use their devices to get health information and one-fifth of smartphone owners have health apps
As mobile, social tools spread throughout the population, people are connecting with each other. Why not harness those tools for health?
Peer-to-peer healthcare is a way for people to do what they have always done – lend a hand, lend an ear, lend advice – but at internet speed and at internet scale.
Food safety, drug safety, and pregnancy information are among eight new topics included in our survey, which finds that 80% of internet users gather health information online.
The online health-information environment is going mobile, particularly among younger adults.
Speaking to the senior staff of the National Library of Medicine last week was like going before the best kind of murder board. Our jumping-off point was the Pew Internet Project’s latest research on internet penetration, mobile use, and the socia…
People living with chronic disease are disproportionately offline. And yet, those who are online have a trump card: They have each other. They gather and share information; they learn from their peers; and they just keep going.
Federal agencies can, and should, be the first responders to health questions. Social media can help.
E-patients are at the center of the health care revolution, but how will Health 2.0 attract and serve the majority, not just the elite?
African Americans are over-represented among cancer patients and under-represented among internet users, particularly on some health discussion group sites.
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