Internet Now Major Source of Campaign News
TV continues to dominate the media landscape, but the internet now rivals newspapers as a main source for campaign news.
TV continues to dominate the media landscape, but the internet now rivals newspapers as a main source for campaign news.
I presented our latest data on social media and health to the Center for Connected Health's 2008 Symposium in Boston.
The internet has changed people's expectations of their relationship with health professionals. One possible next step is the concept of participatory medicine.
Readers react to coverage of our "Networked Families" report (and at least one person is worried about the mom who feels "naked" without her Blackberry).
The New York Times quoted our data in an article entitled Logging On for a Second (or Third) Opinion. We happen to be preparing our next health...
The National Institutes of Health recently gathered a group of consumers and people who study them to discuss how to "chart the next course for NIH communications."
James Fallows writes in the current Atlantic Monthly about the power of blogging... in rural China.
A recent workshop gave me new insights into the strengths and weaknesses of our data.
Ha Tu and Genna Cohen of the released their latest report on how Americans gather health information.
People turn to the internet for health information when the stakes are high and the connection fast.