How do we know that social media is important to health care?
I began a recent speech at a medical school with a question that many busy clinicians might be asking: How do we know that social media is important to health care?
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
I began a recent speech at a medical school with a question that many busy clinicians might be asking: How do we know that social media is important to health care?
The overall verdict: The internet has been a plus for society and an especially good thing for individual users
A round-up of our 2012-13 health and technology research.
One of the recurring themes of my work is to remind people that today is just a moment in time, that things will change — that things have changed even if you personally can’t see it yet.
At the 19th International AIDS Conference, Susannah Fox shared a social history of the internet – our national story and her grandmother’s story.
A one-day forum on social media, HIV, and sexually transmitted infections turned out to be an unfiltered discussion of love, truth, and technology.
Is “peer-to-peer healthcare” an idea whose time has come? Evidence and recent examples.
What is the reach and scope of online social networks? A CNN story prompts debate.
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.
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