Video: The Diagnosis Difference
Highlights from the report, “The Diagnosis Difference”
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Highlights from the report, “The Diagnosis Difference”
39% of U.S. adults provide care for a loved one, up from 30% in 2010, and many navigate health care with the help of technology
People living with disability are less likely than other adults to use the internet.
A summary of recent research related to cancer and the internet.
Consumers are often described as the greatest untapped information resource in medicine, but our research shows that patients and caregivers are already accessing that knowledge.
People living with chronic disease are among the least likely to have internet access, yet once online they often dive deeply into gathering, sharing, and creating health information.
Pew Internet research shows that, in politics and in health care, participation matters as much as access.
Many Americans are jumping into the participatory Web without considering all the implications. If nothing really bad has happened to someone, they tend neither to worry about their personal information nor to take steps to limit the amount of infor…
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?
Just half of adults with chronic conditions use the internet; but once online, they are avid consumers of health information.
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