All Together Now: The Internet Does Not Replace Health Professionals
The kinds of health information sought and found online are different from what people can glean from most traditional sources.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
The kinds of health information sought and found online are different from what people can glean from most traditional sources.
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.
Lee Rainie did a podcast with Inmagic about the latest research of the Pew Internet Project.
Connected patients spread new ideas, new treatments, and new ways of approaching a condition. Put them on your team.
Susannah Fox will present data about the impact of the internet on health and health care to a meeting of the HIT Policy Committee, convened by David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P., National Coordinator…
As the audience for online video continues to grow, a leading edge of internet users are migrating their viewing from their computer screens to their TV screens.
Americans’ pursuit of health takes place within a widening network of both online and offline sources.
New survey data shows that not only is there a participatory class of citizen, but there is a participatory class of patient.
Today we released new data that helps to trace the outline of the cloud in “cloud computing.”
As gadgets with digital audio capability proliferate, podcast downloading continues to increase. Currently, 19% of all internet users say they have downloaded a podcast.
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