scholarly journals Consumer Health Information Service for Patients and Medical Consumers. Medical Information Service by Kyoto Minami Hospital to Its Patients and Regional Inhabitants.

1998 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-56
Author(s):  
Machiko YAMAMURO ◽  
Kazuyo NISHIMURA ◽  
Shigeo TOTSUZAKI ◽  
Susumu TAKAHASHI ◽  
Tsuneyasu TANI ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Mardi Amirault ◽  
Shelley Cobbett ◽  
Andrea Doherty ◽  
Jackie Hartigan-Rogers ◽  
Adele LeBlanc ◽  
...  

The Nova Scotia Health Network (NSHN) is a province-wide, Web-based consumer health information service provided through the cooperative efforts of various organizations, including public libraries, health sciences libraries, the Nova Scotia Provincial Library, and Dalhousie University. The primary intent of the NSHN was to build on existing community resources to provide a quality source of local and general health information. Objective – The purpose was to evaluate the NSHN from the perspective of its users in relation to the ease of use of the site and the usability of the information and content. Methods – A descriptive design was chosen to address the study objectives. Results – Study participants were those users of the NSHN site who agreed to complete and submit an online survey between June 2002 and June 2003. The majority of study respondents were white, middle-aged, English-speaking females, who resided in rural Nova Scotia. They were mostly able to find the information they wanted with little effort and in a reasonable time frame. One in four participants indicated that the information had been used to help them change their lifestyle, whereas one in three reported that they had shared the information with their health care provider. The content found on the site was very highly rated, with more than 90% reporting that the information was easy to understand, useful, and of high quality. Conclusion – The data obtained in this study was positive and encouraging. Sixty-six percent rated the site as a 4 or 5 (with 5 being the best rating) when compared with other health information sites they had visited. Individuals who visited the NSHN site in the past used the acquired information to change health care practices and (or) seek further treatment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 58
Author(s):  
Ellen Rubenstein

Interest in consumer health information has been steadily growing since the mid-twentieth century. As author Mary Grace Flaherty notes in her second chapter, Dr. Benjamin Spock published his book on baby care in 1946, and in 1973, the Boston Women’s Health Collective introduced Our Bodies, Ourselves; both of these supremely popular books offered accessible medical information to the general public and were revised and reprinted many times. In 1996, the Medical Library Association’s Consumer and Patient Health Information Section generated a policy statement addressing how librarians could be involved in facilitating access to consumer health information, and the Institute of Medicine began studying health care delivery in the United States, subsequently affirming that understandable consumer health information is integral to successful medical treatment.


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