Sunday, November 16, 2008

Web Medicine

As many of you know, last month I ran the Chicago Marathon. Well...this summer while I was doing some sprint training at the Harvard track, I felt a painful tightness in the back of my leg, which immediately forced me to stop running. Not really knowing exactly what happened I turned to WebMD.com. Within minutes I knew that I had a mild hamstring strain and I knew exactly how to treat it. The WebMD.com tools such as Symptom Checker and Blogs & Boards make it incredibly easy and cheap for people to gather information about health conditions. With that said, there are some serious drawbacks to this technology. For example, patients could potentially misdiagnose a lifethreating illness!

This morning I read an article in the Boston Globe and patients have now taken online social networking to a new level with PatientsLikeMe.com .
http://www.boston.com/news/health/articles/2008/11/16/through_website_patients_creating_own_drug_studies/
Although this website is limited to only a few chronic diseases/disorders, the information is really amazing! I started by searching a treatment for major depressive disorder; Pristiq - I sell this product. The information I found was amazing...patients were regularly posting anecdotal information such as side effects, results etc of their treatment. The information is meticulously organized into graphs and charts. It seems like a useful website but my concern is that people will substitute physician directed therapy and self treat, which could be dangerous for diseases like major depressive disorder.

Also, I think it would be really interesting to conduct a study to see if these web ites have a therapeutic effect that could supplement pharmacotherapy.

2 comments:

GCK said...

I've actually done some work with PLM. It's a really interesting model. The challenge is to attract enough of a critical mass, which of course is challenging with terminal patients.

Geoffrey Torrance said...

I agree that it's probably difficult to recruit members to PLM but I don't think it's because the patients are terminal. Most of the patients had choronic diseases/disorders such as MDD that isn't terminal, which would to cater to this type of web site. Maybe PLM could partner with pharmaceutical companies to promote the web site. I know my company has launched patient support web sites in the past but they weren't as interactive/social.