Dr. Google and Dr. Microsoft
Keeping an eye on the Dr. Google vs. Dr. Microsoft horserace.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
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Keeping an eye on the Dr. Google vs. Dr. Microsoft horserace.
Legislatures in eight states voted this spring to require insurers to let adult children stay on their parents’ health insurance, even after the traditional cut-off dates on a child’s 18th birthday or college graduation.
This just in: “The Internet appears to be a double-edged sword, assisting in the search for health care information for the poor and elderly while magnifying existing gaps based on other factors.”
Loved ones not only influence your choice of school, car, or housing — they might influence your choices about smoking, exercise, and food, even if they live hundreds of miles away.
MP3s, dishwashers, can openers, and Twitter are examples of "good enough" technologies.
12% of internet users participate in an online patient group.
Cancer “weather maps,” the age of biology, and how cell-only adults really are different from landline users.
Tom Ferguson’s spirit lives on at e-patients.net
This presentation provides data and insights about how the “participatory Web” may change how survey researchers think about online health information, as well as data on adults who continue to be offline in an online world.
Tagging, blogging, and social networking sites allow internet users to search for, catalog, and disseminate information.
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