The Charles Bronfman Prize
PND Philanthropy News Digest - A service of the Foundation Center  
Home Log In Register News Jobs RFPs Foundation Center
Jobs
RFPs
News
Sign up to receive PND e-newsletters.


Foundation Directory Online
 
News
Posted on April 24, 2008   printprint  e-mail  

Online Social Media Transforming Health Care, Report Finds

Online Social Media Transforming Health Care, Report Finds

Social media on the Internet is empowering, engaging, and educating healthcare consumers and providers as part of a new movement called "Health 2.0," a new report from the California HealthCare Foundation finds.

The report, The Wisdom of Patients: Health Care Meets Online Social Media (28 pages, PDF), found that consumers are increasingly using social media — including social networks, blogs, wikis, and videos — for emotional support as well as to manage health conditions, challenging the notion that health care happens only between a patient and a doctor in an exam room.

According to the report, health-related social networks are proliferating rapidly, while new services are under development to help consumers move efficiently through networks without having to be a member of groups that pertain to their illness or interest. Web sites such as DiabetesMine, a blog started by a journalist with adult-onset Type 1 diabetes; the social health network and online forum PatientsLikeMe; and numerous Facebook groups, Flickr photosets, and YouTube pages are all part of the movement devoted to health-related media.

While the regulatory environment for Health 2.0 is still in its infancy, the study found that people in search of health information and support are often willing to trade off aspects of their privacy in exchange for services, as long as the process is transparent. Moreover, social media proponents who address safety concerns note that collective wisdom is, by its nature, self-correcting, and that misinformation is usually quickly removed from such sites.

According to the report, the growing demand for transparency and openness will drive the evolution of social media in health. "Consumer-generated content in health has found a receptive audience in Web 2.0," said report author Jane Sarasohn-Kahn. "Patient opinion leaders have emerged in many disease areas. They will become a key influence on other consumers and, increasingly, the organizations who serve them."

“Social Media's Transformational Impact on Health Care.” California HealthCare Foundation Press Release 4/22/08.

Primary Subject: Science/Technology
Location(s): National

FC011844



Related Links
Bill Gates to Use Social Network to Support Foundation (3/03/08)
Gates Foundation Awards Public Radio International $5 Million to Distribute Global Health Content (12/14/07)
Blogs, Social-Networking Sites Link Youth to Philanthropy (8/23/07)
On the Web - New Routes to Community Health (8/07/07)

PND News Alerts
Receive news alerts every time we post news about:

  • Science/Technology
To sign-up for News Alerts, please log in or register. It's fast and it's free!


Foundation Directory Online Professional

foundationcenter.org
©2009 Foundation Center
All rights reserved.