editorialJournal of Medical Internet ResearchAug 25, 2008GOLD OA

Medicine 2.0: Social Networking, Collaboration, Participation, Apomediation, and Openness

University of Toronto · University Health Network

PubMed
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Abstract

In a very significant development for eHealth, broad adoption of Web 2.0 technologies and approaches coincides with the more recent emergence of Personal Health Application Platforms and Personally Controlled Health Records such as Google Health, Microsoft HealthVault, and Dossia. "Medicine 2.0" applications, services and tools are defined as Web-based services for health care consumers, caregivers, patients, health professionals, and biomedical researchers, that use Web 2.0 technologies and/or semantic web and virtual reality approaches to enable and facilitate specifically 1) social networking, 2) participation, 3) apomediation, 4) openness and 5) collaboration, within and between these user groups. The…

Citation impact

1,140
total citations
FWCI
70.77
Percentile
100%
References
17
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • eHealth
  • World Wide Web
  • The Internet
  • Openness to experience
  • Web 2.0
  • Health care
  • Internet privacy
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Partnerships for the goals
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Funding