1st Edition

Digital Health Meeting Patient and Professional Needs Online

By Barrie Gunter Copyright 2005
    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book is concerned with the provision of health information remotely via the latest communications technologies. The rapidly aging population has led governments to seek more effective methods of maintaining high standards of public health through the cultivation of healthy living, as well as improved and more efficiently delivered health advice and diagnostic services. Experiments with remote provision of health information and transactional services have been piloted to assess in this context the efficacy of new communications technologies, such as personal computers linked to the Internet, interactive digital television in the home, and electronically networked touch-screen kiosks in public locations. Such developments represent part of a wider agenda--through electronic government--to cultivate more dynamic democracies and involve citizens of a time of growing political alienation. The impact of such developments can only properly be established through systematic empirical research. This book examines what has been learned from research-based evaluations of digital health projects.

    It draws upon research from different parts of the world and offers an up-to-date review of the literature in this field. It also presents a detailed account of recent research carried out in Britain on the effectiveness of government-sponsored pilot health information, advice and transactional services provided via kiosks, the Internet, and interactive digital television. It considers the effectiveness of these communications technologies in relation to a range of distinct applications, their use by the public and perceived usefulness and authority, and the potential of remote health delivery to support or supplant more traditional and direct forms of health diagnosis and treatment.

    The book will be of interest to those involved in the academic study of digital media developments, e-government and remote health, as well as to policy-makers and practitioners working in these rapidly growing fields of endeavor.

    Contents: Preface. Public Services Online. The Need for Digital Health. Health and Medicine Online: A Diversity of Applications. Digital Health on the Web. Digital Health Via Kiosks. Digital Health on Television: Early Adoption and Use. Digital Health on Television: Service Usability and User Psychology. Digital Health: Perceived Benefits and Health Impact. Digital Health: Public Confidence and Trust in Sources. The Future Potential of Digital Health.

    Biography

    Barrie Gunter

    "Gunter's book manages to compile a large amount of resources into a brief but thought-provoking tool for anyone interested in telehealth. The book is an excellent introduction into the area and provides readers with a good foundation on what technologies and programs are being used by other countries....readers have access to research on what could make telehealth programs successful and why."

    PsycCRITIQUES