Attendees/Speakers/Social Network

Medicine 2.0'08 (Toronto, Canada)


 
Username Name/Affiliation/Country Presentation title Relationship with you [login to see/change your relationship]
 

handyamin
Handy Amin

Health Promotion Board

Singapore
Planning the Development of the Singapore National Health Portal

 

paramore
Jason Aprile

OntarioMD

Canada
Providing Online Access to Point-of-Care Information: Lessons from the OntarioMD.ca Physician Portal

 

ibajnok
Irmajean Bajnok

RNAO

Canada
RNAO eChampion Program

 

bamidis
Panagiotis D Bamidis

ELKE AUTH, EL090049627, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, School of Health Sciences, Dept. of Medicine

Greece
The use of Web 2.0 in teaching Medical Informatics to postgraduate medical students: first experiences

Usage of Semantic Web Technologies (Web-3.0) Aiming to Facilitate the Utilisation of Computerized Algorithmic Medicine in Clinical Practice

 

abarclay
Allan R Barclay

University of Wisconsin-Madison

United States
Development of an RSS-based Current Awareness Service

 

chrbex
Christin Bexelius

Karolinska Institutet

Sweden
E-epidemiology - adapting epidemiological data collection to the 21st century

 

billman
Dorrit Billman

PARC & ISLE/CSLI

United States
Patient Problem-Solving on the Web: How do Patients Use Web Forums to Cope with Chronic Disease?

 

jbonander
Jason Bonander

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

United States
Personally Tailored Health Information: A Health 2.0 Approach

 

cbond
Carol S Bond

Bournemouth University

United Kingdom
Stop The World wide web I Want To Get Off.

 

lbowler
Leanne Bowler

Faculty, Univ of Pgh Library Science

United States
Where can teens find health information? A survey of web portals designed for teen health information seekers

 

mcabrer
Miguel Cabrer

eHealth Advisor

Spain
MDPIXX: The Global Medical Images Repository

Virtual Health Platform

 

cabrema
Marcelino M Cabrera Giraldez

Institute for Prospective Technological Studies - Joint Researc Centre - European Commission

Spain
The potential of social computing for biomedical research on rare diseases

 

dafnacarr
Dafna Carr

Cancer Care Ontario

Canada
Using Technology to Engage Patients and Clinicians in Electronic Cancer Symptom Assessment and Management: Lessons Learned and Implications for Practice

 

deb830
Deborah Chan

University Health Network

Canada
InfoWell Patient Portal: A Case of Patient-Centred Design

 

kclauson
Kevin A. Clauson

Nova Southeastern University, College of Pharmacy

United States
Risk 2.0: The future of connected health (Panel)

 

neilcoulson
Neil S Coulson

University of Nottingham

United Kingdom
Living with HIV/AIDS and use of online support groups

 

dcovvey
Dominic J. Covvey

Waterloo Institute for Health Informatics Research (DC3333), University of Waterloo

Canada
Representing and Processing Dynamic Healthcare Workflow

Creating and Supporting a Community of Practice

 

magicgp
Grant Philip Cumming

NHS Grampian Scotland

United Kingdom
e-health in a Remote and Rural Setting in the North of Scotland- An Evolving Success Story

 

maartendenbraber
Maarten M. Den Braber

Nexthealth

Netherlands
"Nexthealth" - An Open-Source, Web-Based Tool Determining "What's Next" in the Evolution of Consumer-Centric Care Delivery

 

sdickers
Suzanne S Dickerson

University At Buffalo

United States
Developing of a web-based application to facilitate patient treatment adherence in individuals with sleep apnea treated with Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) devices.

 

dzenowagisj
Joan Dzenowagis

World Health Organization

Switzerland
Risk 2.0: The future of connected health (Panel)

 

oye@helsebiblioteket.no
Øystein Eiring

University of Oslo

Norway
Implementation of Web 2.0-services in the Norwegian Electronic Health Library

 

luis.luque
Luis Fernandez Luque

Norut (Norway) and Salumedia.com (Spain)

Norway
Study of the ePatient as a provider of health content in the Internet

 

jfrost
Jeana H Frost

PatientsLikeMe

United States
Social uses of personal health information within PatientsLikeMeTM, an online patient community: What can happen when patients have access to one another's data

 

shakmatt
Derek L Hansen

University of Maryland

United States
Patient-Driven Content Creation: Effectively Introducing Wiki Repositories to Virtual Support Communities

 

maggie08
Margaret M Hansen

University of San Francisco

United States
Versatile, Immersive, Creative and Dynamic Virtual 3-D Healthcare Learning

 

shughes5
Shannon Hughes

Utah State University

United States
The Construction of Expertise in the Age of the Internet: Psychotropic Drug Knowledge in Consumer-Constructed Online Spaces

 

benjaminhughes
Benjamin Hughes

ESADE

Spain
To 2.0 or not to 2.0 - have junior doctors already answered the question?

 

tissuepathology
Keith J Kaplan

Mayo Clinic

United States
Medical Bloggers Panel

 

kasshout
Taha A Kass-hout

InSTEDD

United States
Biosurveillance 2.0: A Social Networking Approach

 

zachjl11
Zach Landis Lewis

University of Pittsburgh

United States
Measuring Efficiency of Use in a Web-based EMR Developed for Malawi: Lessons Learned From Performing a Preliminary CogTool Analysis

 

lenha
Hanberger Lena

RN MSc

Sweden
Web 2.0 systems supporting childhood chronic disease management: a general architecture compliant with the WHA eHealth Resolution

 

litton
Jan-Eric Litton

Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Sweden
E-epidemiology - adapting epidemiological data collection to the 21st century

 

mikenstn
Michael Martineau

MED2020 Health Care Software Inc.

Canada
Consumers are not Patient(s)

 

jmayoh
Joanne Mayoh

Bournemouth University


Will the development of Web 2.0 technology result in a preference for quantity over quality?

 

jmccabegorman
Jen S Mccabe

OrganizedWisdom, NextHealth (NL), Contagion Health (USA)

United States
"Nexthealth" - An Open-Source, Web-Based Tool Determining "What's Next" in the Evolution of Consumer-Centric Care Delivery

 

matic.meglic
Matic Meglic

National Institute of Public Health

Slovenia
Web and mobile solution for support of process of care: case of depression

 

NCurse
Bertalan Mesko

Budapest, Hungary

Hungary
Medical education and building an on-line reputation in the world of web 2.0

Medical Bloggers Panel

 

sheryl
Sheryl Mitchell

Womens College Hospital

Canada
Women Wading Through the Web: providing women with the tools to evaluate online health information

 

peterjmurray
Peter J Murray

IMIA

United Kingdom
Medical Bloggers Panel

 

edoardo.narduzzi
Edoardo Narduzzi

MyOpenCare

Italy
MyOpenCare: Multicontent treatment paths to share medical knowledge and experience

 

nicolnijland
Nicol Nijland

University of Twente

Netherlands
Evaluation of the use of an interactive web-based support program for optimizing the management of Diabetes Mellitus

 

samno
Sam Nordfeldt

MD PhD

Sweden
Web 2.0 systems supporting childhood chronic disease management: a general architecture compliant with the WHA eHealth Resolution

 

logrady
Laura O'grady

Centre for Global eHealth Innovation

Canada
Not every site needs a wiki: A conceptual framework for health Websites

 

chrispaton
Chris Paton

University of Oxford

United Kingdom
Mobile Medicine 2.0

New Media Medicine: A Social Network for Doctors and Medical Students

 

ppennefather
Peter Pennefather

Laboratory for Collaborative Diagnostics, Univ. of Toronto

Canada
BioTIFF: Articulating Self-Documenting Personal Health Digital Information Artefacts

 

mpritsker
Moshe Pritsker

JoVE

United States
Online video-publication for biological research

 

judyproudfoot
Judy Proudfoot

School of Psychiatry and Black Dog Institute, University of New South Wales, Australia

Australia
Methodological Issues and Challenges in eHealth Research Panel

Expert Patients as Apomediaries

 

barbara_purin
Barbara Purin

Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK)

Italy
User-centered Design of a PHR: Traditional Web Forms vs. Wizard Forms

 

prich
Pat Rich

Canadian Medical Association

Canada
Asklepios: The CMA's new social networking site for Canadian physicians

 

nseeman
Neil Seeman

IBM Healthcare and Ryerson University

Canada
Inside the Health Blogosphere: Governance, Quality and the New Opinion Leaders

 

saulobortolon
Hilario Seibel Jr

CEFETES

Brazil
Using Wiki for a Large Medical Nomenclature Translation

 

kenseto
Ken Seto

OntarioMD

Canada
Facilitating Online Collaboration and Communication: A Groups Approach

 

shachak
Aviv Shachak

University of Toronto

Canada
Collaborative Knowledge Translation: Application of a Wiki Model for Primary Care Practitioners

 

samhsolomon
Sam Solomon

National Review of Medicine

Canada
Medical Bloggers Panel

 

tooti
Toomas Timpka

Linköping University

Sweden
Web 2.0 systems supporting childhood chronic disease management: a general architecture compliant with the WHA eHealth Resolution

 

SaraUrowitz
Sara Urowitz

Princess Margaret Hospital/University Health Network

Canada
From Social Networks to Social Medicine: Exploring the role of online interventions

 

Trevor
Trevor D V Van Mierlo

V-CC Systems Inc.

Canada
Moderated online social networking for smokers: Content of first posts from 2,562 members

 

nelly_van_uden
Cornelia F. Van Uden-kraan

University of Twente

Netherlands
Empowerment by Participation in Online Support Groups for Patients with Arthritis, Fibromyalgia and Breast Cancer

Patient-initiated Online Support Groups: Motives for Initiation, Extent of Success and Success Factors

 

robertverheij
ROBERT VERHEIJ

NETHERLANDS INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH

Netherlands
Hesitative Introduction of E-mail consultations in General Practice

 

rod
Rod Ward

University of the West of England, Bristol

United Kingdom
The potential and challenges of Web 2.0 in the education of healthcare professionals.

 

steveann
David O. Wiebers, M.D.

Preventive Medicine, LLC

United States
Preventive Medicine and the Allen Behavioral Change Model: A Collaboration for Health Behavior Change Using Web-based Interventions

 

witteman
Holly O Witteman

Université Laval

Canada
Not every site needs a wiki: A conceptual framework for health Websites

 
 


Medicine 2.0® is happy to support and promote other conferences and workshops in this area. Contact us to produce, disseminate and promote your conference or workshop under this label and in this event series. In addition, we are always looking for hosts of future World Congresses. Medicine 2.0® is a registered trademark of JMIR Publications Inc., the leading academic ehealth publisher.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.