Studies in health technology and informatics, 1998
Individuals must increasingly take control of managing their own health affairs. This requires ac... more Individuals must increasingly take control of managing their own health affairs. This requires access to quality information that is not easily obtained from traditional social institutions. NetWellness is an electronic consumer health information service that provides a model for reaching the goal of enhancing personal health and quality of life. [1] We present a vision of consumer health information delivery in the 21st century, and a model for reaching that vision. Our experience to date, progressing through a five-phase model, is aimed at providing the best health information possible to the widest population possible.
Available technology allows for the capture and rebroadcast of lectures via computer-based tools.... more Available technology allows for the capture and rebroadcast of lectures via computer-based tools. Such tools have the potential to enhance medical education. Medical schools are beginning to offer such services, but little is known about end-user preferences. We surveyed students at one US medical school to gather their preferences for the availability and use of computer-based lecture presentation. These findings add to the limited literature regarding use of such tools for medical education.
NetWellness is a community-based, consumer-defined grant program supporting the delivery of elect... more NetWellness is a community-based, consumer-defined grant program supporting the delivery of electronic health information to rural residents of southern Ohio and urban and suburban communities in the Greater Cincinnati tri-state region. NetWellness is a collaboratively developed and publicly and privately funded demonstration project. Information is delivered via ISDN, standard dial, dedicated network connections, and the Internet. TriState Online (Greater Cincinnati's Free-Net) and other southern Ohio Free-Nets are key access points in the larger project communities. The other access points are more than forty workstations distributed at public sites throughout the project's primary geographical area. Design strengths and limitations, training initiatives, technical issues, and the project's impact on medical librarianship are examined in this paper. Also discussed are ways of determining community needs and interest, building political alliances, finding and developing...
Abstract As consumers face an increasing need for useful health information, the Internet may bec... more Abstract As consumers face an increasing need for useful health information, the Internet may become an important vehicle for meeting that need. However, not everyone hasor can affordcomputers and communications links, let alone the time to sift through the vast ...
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 1997
The growing public interest in health and wellness information stems from many sources, including... more The growing public interest in health and wellness information stems from many sources, including social changes related to consumers' rights and women's health movements, and economic changes brought about by the managed health care revolution. Public, hospital, and medical center libraries have been ill-equipped to meet the increasing need for consumer-oriented materials, even though a few notable programs have been established. The ''Information Superhighway'' could be an effective tool for sharing health information if access to telecomputing equipment and training were available to those with an information need. The University of Cincinnati Medical Center, with its libraries in the leading role, is delivering NetWellness, an electronic consumer health library service, to residents of 29 counties in three midwestern states. Users connect directly through the Internet, through regional Free-Nets, and by visiting one of 43 public access sites where networked workstations have been installed. The continued success of the project depends on developing partnerships, providing quality content and maintaining fair access.
Studies in health technology and informatics, 1998
Individuals must increasingly take control of managing their own health affairs. This requires ac... more Individuals must increasingly take control of managing their own health affairs. This requires access to quality information that is not easily obtained from traditional social institutions. NetWellness is an electronic consumer health information service that provides a model for reaching the goal of enhancing personal health and quality of life. [1] We present a vision of consumer health information delivery in the 21st century, and a model for reaching that vision. Our experience to date, progressing through a five-phase model, is aimed at providing the best health information possible to the widest population possible.
Available technology allows for the capture and rebroadcast of lectures via computer-based tools.... more Available technology allows for the capture and rebroadcast of lectures via computer-based tools. Such tools have the potential to enhance medical education. Medical schools are beginning to offer such services, but little is known about end-user preferences. We surveyed students at one US medical school to gather their preferences for the availability and use of computer-based lecture presentation. These findings add to the limited literature regarding use of such tools for medical education.
NetWellness is a community-based, consumer-defined grant program supporting the delivery of elect... more NetWellness is a community-based, consumer-defined grant program supporting the delivery of electronic health information to rural residents of southern Ohio and urban and suburban communities in the Greater Cincinnati tri-state region. NetWellness is a collaboratively developed and publicly and privately funded demonstration project. Information is delivered via ISDN, standard dial, dedicated network connections, and the Internet. TriState Online (Greater Cincinnati's Free-Net) and other southern Ohio Free-Nets are key access points in the larger project communities. The other access points are more than forty workstations distributed at public sites throughout the project's primary geographical area. Design strengths and limitations, training initiatives, technical issues, and the project's impact on medical librarianship are examined in this paper. Also discussed are ways of determining community needs and interest, building political alliances, finding and developing...
Abstract As consumers face an increasing need for useful health information, the Internet may bec... more Abstract As consumers face an increasing need for useful health information, the Internet may become an important vehicle for meeting that need. However, not everyone hasor can affordcomputers and communications links, let alone the time to sift through the vast ...
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 1997
The growing public interest in health and wellness information stems from many sources, including... more The growing public interest in health and wellness information stems from many sources, including social changes related to consumers' rights and women's health movements, and economic changes brought about by the managed health care revolution. Public, hospital, and medical center libraries have been ill-equipped to meet the increasing need for consumer-oriented materials, even though a few notable programs have been established. The ''Information Superhighway'' could be an effective tool for sharing health information if access to telecomputing equipment and training were available to those with an information need. The University of Cincinnati Medical Center, with its libraries in the leading role, is delivering NetWellness, an electronic consumer health library service, to residents of 29 counties in three midwestern states. Users connect directly through the Internet, through regional Free-Nets, and by visiting one of 43 public access sites where networked workstations have been installed. The continued success of the project depends on developing partnerships, providing quality content and maintaining fair access.
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Papers by Birsen Kaya