1 / 38

Some Internet & Healthcare Challenges

Some Internet & Healthcare Challenges. An introduction Dr Daniel DÉSIR General Secretary Belgian Hospital Association. History of Internet (1).

Télécharger la présentation

Some Internet & Healthcare Challenges

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Some Internet & Healthcare Challenges An introduction Dr Daniel DÉSIR General Secretary Belgian Hospital Association

  2. History of Internet (1) 1962 - Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA) builds a small network (ARPANET) to promote the sharing of super-computers amongst US researchers. 1969 - ARPANET connects 4 universities : Stanford, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, and U of Utah 1970 - E mail most popular application of ARPANET 1973 - ARPANET goes international (London and Norway) 1982 - The term 'Internet' used for the first time. 1982 - TCP/IP, common language of Internet computers 1985 - E-mail part of life at many universities 1988 - "Internet Worm" temporarily disables 6,000 of the 60,000 Internet hosts.

  3. History of Internet (2) 1991 – Birth of the World Wide Web 1991 - Tim Berners-Lee (CERN) : hypertext markup language (html) 1992 - More than 1,000,000 hosts are part of the Internet. 1994 – Netscape Corp. Pizza Hut accepts Net orders. 1996 - Nearly 10 million hosts online. 2000 - 6 billions of electronic messages yearly 2001 - 111 millions hosts and 1 billion pages available.

  4. Internet users (2001) (millions of users)

  5. « Fairy tales » billionnairs Yahoo ! (Stanford - 1995) : Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle ! • 1 million USD became once 10 billions USD • 100 billions USD max market capitalization (2000) • 8 billions USD today • Revenues 2000 : 1,11 billions USD • Net income 2000 : 70 millions USD • 120 millions users monthly worldwide

  6. Yahoo ! QuotationsNASDAQ (1996-2001)

  7. WWW in the year 2000 :English language imperialism is vanishing 327 millions users with : • 160 millions English users (49 %) • 167 millions non English users (51 %)

  8. Diabetes mellitus on the Web (n pages - july 2000)

  9. Internet & Healthcare • About 100 000 medical and health sites • 40 millions visitors each year • several thousands of focused associations • 1st reason to surf (more than stock exchange entertainment or weather forecast) • « the good, the bad and the ugly » : • free & validated scientific information • no quality label(s) • unregulated quackery

  10. Internet & Healthcare Some (meta) search engines : • NorthernLight • Altavista • Metacrawler • Fast (alltheweb.com) • Google • Yahoo • Lycos • MedHunt Références : http://hopitalerasme.org/

  11. Internet & Healthcare Some Web sites on general topics : • PubMed (NIH - Bethesda) • British Medical Journal • New England Journal of Medicine • Health On the Net Foundation (Genève) • Medscape • Agency for Healthcare Policy and Research (USA) • Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (USA) • World Health Organization • Ministries of Health (France, UK, Canada) • CHU de ROUEN (French)

  12. Healthcare : Who is surfing ?

  13. Healthcare : What are lay surfers looking for ?

  14. Internet & Healthcare Main characteristics : • dominating consensus to avoid any kind of regulation • no meta-editor, no control of content • no authority, no peer review • health = youth, beauty, fitness • priority : trade (and not public health) • ubiquitous US imperialism (hardware, software, routers, browsers, search engines, data banks, ...)

  15. Internet, Health and Trade To sell : • « Beauty - Body -Fitness » products • diets and vitamins • prescription drugs • insurance • books on « health » and « medicine » • travels and congresses

  16. Patients & Internet • distance between North-American and European realities • agreement to avoid anonymous encounters (patients-providers) and overflow (flood) • skills, open mind, education, equipment and availability of physicians ? • Is it ethically mandatory to answer to electronic requests of your own patients ?

  17. Notification about early-release articles New England of Medicine : • frequent early-release papers since 1999 • > 70 000 members of the E mailing list • > 50 000 subscribers for the E Journal • 125 000 visitors of the Web site each week Campion EW, NEJM 341 : 2085, 1999

  18. Quality of health and medical information on the Web ? Criteria ? Actors ? Tools ?

  19. Internet e-Health ethical guidelines • Candor - Honesty • Quality - Professionalism • Privacy - Informed consent • Responsible partnering • Accountability • Disclosure of authorship / interests

  20. + universities reknowned scientific journals hospitals public agencies groups of experts thematic organisations - individual practicionners individual experts leagues of consumers associations of patients sponsored associations commercial and advertising Web sites Internet : Credibility of sources ? Credibility = « capacity to inspire a belief » Credible = « providing acceptable grounds to be believed »

  21. Quackery sites on the Web General Characteristics : • Any site used to market herbs or dietary supplements, typically including : • (a) lack of full disclosure of relevant facts, • (b) promotion or sale of products that lack a rational use, and/or • (c) failure to provide advice indicating who should not use the products. • Any site used to market or promote homeopathic products. No such products have been proven effective. • Any site that generally promotes "alternative" methods.There are more than a thousand worthless "alternative" methods. • Any site that promotes "nontoxic," "natural," "holistic," or "miraculous" treatments. Source : http://www.quackwatch.com/

  22. Quackery on the Web Common false statements about nutrition : • Everyone should take vitamins • Vitamins are effective against stress. • Taking vitamins makes people more energetic. • Losing weight is easy. • Special diets can cure cancer. Source : http://www.quackwatch.com/

  23. Quackery on the Web Other widespread false statements : • fluoride supplements are dangerous • immunizations are dangerous • Mercury-amalgam filings make people sick Source : http://www.quackwatch.com/

  24. Usefulness of a hospital Web site ? • passive information - business card <http://www.hospitals.be/> • active information retrieval • active interaction (data, parameters, protocols, appointments, consultations et al.)

  25. Review by Price-Waterhouse(march 2000) 85 Belgian hospitals (Flanders and Brussels) : • 33 sites Web sites (39 %) • providing general information (42 %), illustrated by pictures and photos (33 %) • Less than 25 % of sites regularly updated (several not updated since july 1998)

  26. Internet in Belgium ? For surfers / patients / lay people : • cost of telecommunications (telephone to cable) • distrust in electronic shopping, banking, ... • slow and obsolete equipments • few providers of information in a small local market • cultural and socio-economic gaps ? • Training ? Poorly available

  27. Internet : slow pace in Belgium ? In Belgian hospitals : • IT priority to Y2K and « Euro » challenges • Web « communication » is not a priority • willingness to discard advertisement practices • distrust with regard to e-insecurity • fear of « me-too » and fashion effects • « a lipstick on a bulldog face ? » • cultural obstacles ? (« a tool for teenagers ») • confusion ? IT / communication

  28. Web Site of Hôpital Érasme (Brussels) http://intranet/ http://hopitalerasme.org/ http://www.ulb.ac.be/erasme/ 3 500 pages - 1 full-time operator Editorial board - 10 members

  29. Web site Erasme : 1999 / 2000 n visitors / month : 853 to 3 755 n countries visitors : 27 to 51 % visitors (erasmians) : 66 to 36 % % visitors (Belgians) : 89 to 66 %

  30. E mail - Intranet 1 400 connected PC (Intranet) : • Professional use ? • Who is actually reading the messages ? • Who is really mastering the tools ? • Who is abusing ? What kind of abuse ? • Are there « Webholics - On-lineholics » ?

  31. Electronic mailFour principles : 4 "D"s • Dump • Delegate • Do • Delay

  32. Electronic mail • No naive trust in self-learning capabilities • intensely - but roughly - used tool (attached files, links, html ?) • under-utilized equipment • mail not read (> 50 % ?) • exasperating spam • ubiquitous need of training, help desk and maintenance teams • vulnerability in front of budget cuts

  33. Visions of the future ... • "I think there is a world market for may be five computers." Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943 • "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home." Ken Olson, founder of Digital Equipment Corp.,1977 • "640K ought to be enough for anybody." Bill Gates, Microsoft, 1981

  34. Experts ? Not all predictions of experts are true ! Not all predictions of experts that are true will impact you !

More Related