Mesko
Cellular Therapy and Transplantation (CTT), Vol. 2, No. 8
Please cite this article as follows: Mesko B. Online medical content curation and personal time management with Web 2.0: an exciting era. Cell Ther Transplant. 2011;2:e.000093.01. doi:10.3205/ctt-2011-en-000093.01
© The Author. This article is provided under the following license:
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)
Submitted: 2 January 2011, accepted: 9 September 2011, published: 10 December 2011
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Online medical content curation and personal time management with Web 2.0: an exciting era
Bertalan Mesko, MD
Managing director of Webicina.com
Correspondence: Bertalan Mesko, MD; Managing director of Webicina.com, E-mail: berci.mesko@gmail.com
| AbstractThe recent increase in the number of online medical resources has raised important questions about content curation on the World Wide Web and the importance of time management tools and applications used in medicine and healthcare. Content curation is crucial at a time when patients and their doctors are searching more online but the majority of health resources are considered medically unreliable. The value of crowdsourcing and time management tools that can save time and effort for professionals is demonstrated. |
| IntroductionThe number of users seeking medical websites and health information online has been growing rapidly in the last few years [1]. Over 60% of Americans alone have searched for diseases, symptoms, or treatments [2]. Alongside this, the web usage of medical professionals is also growing [3]. With new web tools and applications, it is not only communication between patients that has gone through significant changes (e.g. Patientslikeme.com), but communication between medical professionals has become faster and more efficient, too, providing different opportunities depending on the particular medical specialty [4]. |
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| Other solutions that aggregate medical content online but not social media include Faculty of 1000, a post publication peer-review platform where Faculty Members can evaluate and rank particular papers published in the biomedical field; Medpedia, the medical alternative to Wikipedia; Health on the Net Foundation, a non-profit organization, and Medworm.com, among others (Table 1). |
Name | URL | When was it founded? | Who curates it? | What is curated? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Faculty of 1000 | 2002 | Faculty Members | Papers in medical journals | |
Health on the Net Foundation | 1995 | Group of medical professionals | Medical websites and Blogs | |
Healthcare Bloggers Code of Ethics | Unknown | Group of medical bloggers | Medical blogs | |
Medpedia | 2009 | Group of medical professionals | Medical content | |
Medworm | Frankie Dolan | Websites and journals | ||
Webicina | 2008 | Group of medical professionals | Medical resources including Social media | |
Cell Ther Transplant. 2011;3:e.000093.01. doi:10.3205/ctt-2011-en-000093-table1 | ||||
| Online medical content curationBefore 2008, whenever I tried to find a good diabetes blog or quality cardiology resources, it took a lot of time to find them — not because I did not know how to search properly, but because it really takes time to learn how to assess the quality of medical websites. In this respect, the fields of politics and sports are totally different from medicine and healthcare. So I thought there should be a service that curates medical resources for patients and doctors — for free — and by using professionals and not algorithms or search engines. Webicina was launched in 2008 and now has over 3000 curated resources, from blogs and podcasts to wikis and mobile apps, focusing on 80 medical specialties or conditions in 17 languages; and all these numbers are constantly growing. |
| Efficient time management with Web 2.0I first became active in Web 2.0/social media back in 2005 when I realized whenever I did a search for any terms, I ended up on Wikipedia, where I could edit the entries, especially the genetics-related ones. So I became a Wikipedia editor, and later in 2006, an administrator. A few months later, I came across Wordpress.com and launched my medical blog, Scienceroll.com, which received a special mention in Medgadget’s Weblog Awards a few months later; giving me the idea that I should keep on blogging and take it very seriously. At the time, I was a 3rd year medical student. |
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What would I do if | In 2000 | Now |
|---|---|---|
I need clinical answer | Try to find a colleague who knows it | Post a question on Twitter |
I want to hear a patient's story about a specific condition | Try to find a patient in my town | Read blogs, watch YouTube |
I want to be up-to-date | Go to the library once a week | Use RSS and follow hundreds of journals |
I want to work on a manuscript with my team | We gather around the table | Use Google Docs without geographical limits |
Cell Ther Transplant. 2011;3:e.000093.01. doi:10.3205/ctt-2011-en-000093-table2 | ||
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| Staying up-to-date in one of the most emerging scientific fieldsCrowdsourcing is crucial today. I check the best-of-the-day feature on Friendfeed, because I have hundreds of scientific contacts there who select the most important scientific news and discussions every day. On Twitter I do the same but for medicine, and Facebook for me is more about keeping up with what is happening with my colleagues from around the world and what kind of projects they are launching. Google Reader is for news sites and blogs, and I use Webicina’s PeRSSonalized Medicine to see the latest improvements in genomics. |
| ConclusionsContent curation is a key element in the future of Internet technologies from the medical perspective. As the number of online medical resources and people seeking medical information is constantly growing, there is a clear need for a free service providing selected resources both for medical professionals and patients. |
| AcknowledgementsThe author is the managing director of Webicina.com. |
References
[References with links indicate that an article is available Open Access]
1. Mesko B, and Dubecz A. New possibilities provided by the internet in medicine. Orv Hetil 148. 2007:2095-2099.
2. Susannah Fox SJ. The Social Life of Health Information. Pew Internet Project. 2009.
Recommended further reading
1. Sara Kjellberg. I am a blogging researcher: Motivations for blogging in a scholarly context. First Monday, Volume 15, Number 8, 2 August 2010.
2. Catherine Gray. If you build it, will they come? How researchers perceive and use web 2.0, 06 July 2010.
3. Bertalan Mesko. Internet in Medicine: 2000 vs 2010.
4. Richard Gordon and Bryan J. Poulin. There is but one journal: the scientific literature. Comment on: Young NS, Ioannidis JPA, Al-Ubaydli O, 2008. Why Current Publication Practices May Distort Science. PLoS Med 5(10):e201. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050201.
5. Abigail De Kosnik. Teaching with Google Docs, or, How to Teach in a Digital Media Lab without Losing Students’ Attention. In: Learning through Digital Media, Essays on Technology and Pedagogy (in open peer review phase).
© The Author. This article is provided under the following license:
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)
Please cite this article as follows: Mesko B. Online medical content curation and personal time management with Web 2.0: an exciting era. Cell Ther Transplant. 2011;2:e.000093.01. doi:10.3205/ctt-2011-en-000093.01
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