18 results on '"Fernandez-Luque, Luis"'
Search Results
2. Digital technologies to improve the precision of paediatric growth disorder diagnosis and management.
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Dunkel, Leo, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Loche, Sandro, and Savage, Martin O.
- Abstract
Paediatric disorders of impaired linear growth are challenging to manage, in part because of delays in the identification of pathological short stature and subsequent referral and diagnosis, the requirement for long-term therapy, and frequent poor adherence to treatment, notably with human growth hormone (hGH). Digital health technologies hold promise for improving outcomes in paediatric growth disorders by supporting personalisation of care, from diagnosis to treatment and follow up. The value of automated systems in monitoring linear growth in children has been demonstrated in Finland, with findings that such a system is more effective than a traditional manual system for early diagnosis of abnormal growth. Artificial intelligence has potential to resolve problems of variability that may occur during analysis of growth information, and augmented reality systems have been developed that aim to educate patients and caregivers about growth disorders and their treatment (such as injection techniques for hGH administration). Adherence to hGH treatment is often suboptimal, which negatively impacts the achievement of physical and psychological benefits of the treatment. Personalisation of adherence support necessitates capturing individual patient adherence data; the use of technology to assist with this is exemplified by the use of an electronic injection device, which shares real-time recordings of the timing, date and dose of hGH delivered to the patient with the clinician, via web-based software. The use of an electronic device is associated with high levels of adherence to hGH treatment and improved growth outcomes. It can be anticipated that future technological advances, coupled with continued 'human interventions' from healthcare providers, will further improve management of paediatric growth disorders. • Growth disorders impact on patients and their families. • Delays in diagnosis and treatment negatively affect outcomes. • Digital interventions improve growth monitoring and data analysis. • Such technology can improve adherence to human growth hormone therapy. • Education of patients/caregivers may also be positively impacted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Social Media in Health — What are the Safety Concerns for Health Consumers?
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Lau, Annie Y.S., Gabarron, Elia, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, and Armayones, Manuel
- Abstract
Recent literature has discussed the unintended consequences of clinical information technologies (IT) on patient safety, yet there has been little discussion about the safety concerns in the area of consumer health IT. This paper presents a range of safety concerns for consumers in social media, with a case study on YouTube. We conducted a scan of abstracts on ‘quality criteria’ related to YouTube. Five areas regarding the safety of YouTube for consumers were identified: (a) harmful health material targeted at consumers (such as inappropriate marketing of tobacco or direct-to-consumer drug advertising); (b) public display of unhealthy behaviour (such as people displaying self-injury behaviours or hurting others); (c) tainted public health messages (i.e. the rise of negative voices against public health messages); (d) psychological impact from accessing inappropriate, offensive or biased social media content; and (e) using social media to distort policy and research funding agendas. The examples presented should contribute to a better understanding about how to promote a safe consumption and production of social media for consumers, and an evidence-based approach to designing social media interventions for health. The potential harm associated with the use of unsafe social media content on the Internet is a major concern. More empirical and theoretical studies are needed to examine how social media influences consumer health decisions, behaviours and outcomes, and devise ways to deter the dissemination of harmful influences in social media.
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- 2012
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4. An eHealth Framework for Managing Pediatric Growth Disorders and Growth Hormone Therapy.
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Dimitri, Paul, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Banerjee, Indraneel, Bergadá, Ignacio, Calliari, Luis Eduardo, Dahlgren, Jovanna, Arriba, Antonio de, Lapatto, Risto, Reinehr, Thomas, Senniappan, Senthil, Thomas-Teinturier, Cécile, Tsai, Meng-Che, Zaini, Azriyanti Anuar, Bagha, Merat, Koledova, Ekaterina, de Arriba, Antonio, and Anuar Zaini, Azriyanti
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GROWTH disorders ,HORMONE therapy ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,PATIENT compliance ,PHYSICIANS ,PITUITARY dwarfism ,SOMATOTROPIN - Abstract
Background: The use of technology to support health and health care has grown rapidly in the last decade across all ages and medical specialties. Newly developed eHealth tools are being implemented in long-term management of growth failure in children, a low prevalence pediatric endocrine disorder.Objective: Our objective was to create a framework that can guide future implementation and research on the use of eHealth tools to support patients with growth disorders who require growth hormone therapy.Methods: A total of 12 pediatric endocrinologists with experience in eHealth, from a wide geographical distribution, participated in a series of online discussions. We summarized the discussions of 3 workshops, conducted during 2020, on the use of eHealth in the management of growth disorders, which were structured to provide insights on existing challenges, opportunities, and solutions for the implementation of eHealth tools across the patient journey, from referral to the end of pediatric therapy.Results: A total of 815 responses were collected from 2 questionnaire-based activities covering referral and diagnosis of growth disorders, and subsequent growth hormone therapy stages of the patient pathway, relating to physicians, nurses, and patients, parents, or caregivers. We mapped the feedback from those discussions into a framework that we developed as a guide to integration of eHealth tools across the patient journey. Responses focused on improved clinical management, such as growth monitoring and automation of referral for early detection of growth disorders, which could trigger rapid evaluation and diagnosis. Patient support included the use of eHealth for enhanced patient and caregiver communication, better access to educational opportunities, and enhanced medical and psychological support during growth hormone therapy management. Given the potential availability of patient data from connected devices, artificial intelligence can be used to predict adherence and personalize patient support. Providing evidence to demonstrate the value and utility of eHealth tools will ensure that these tools are widely accepted, trusted, and used in clinical practice, but implementation issues (eg, adaptation to specific clinical settings) must be addressed.Conclusions: The use of eHealth in growth hormone therapy has major potential to improve the management of growth disorders along the patient journey. Combining objective clinical information and patient adherence data is vital in supporting decision-making and the development of new eHealth tools. Involvement of clinicians and patients in the process of integrating such technologies into clinical practice is essential for implementation and developing evidence that eHealth tools can provide value across the patient pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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5. Analysis of Diabetes Apps to Assess Privacy-Related Permissions: Systematic Search of Apps.
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Flors-Sidro, José Javier, Househ, Mowafa, Abd-Alrazaq, Alaa, Vidal-Alaball, Josep, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, and Sanchez-Bocanegra, Carlos Luis
- Abstract
Background: Mobile health has become a major vehicle of support for people living with diabetes. Accordingly, the availability of mobile apps for diabetes has been steadily increasing. Most of the previous reviews of diabetes apps have focused on the apps' features and their alignment with clinical guidelines. However, there is a lack of knowledge on the actual compliance of diabetes apps with privacy and data security guidelines. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the levels of privacy of mobile apps for diabetes to contribute to the raising of awareness of privacy issues for app users, developers, and governmental data protection regulators. Methods: We developed a semiautomatic app search module capable of retrieving Android apps' privacy-related information, particularly the dangerous permissions required by apps, with the aim of analyzing privacy aspects related to diabetes apps. Following the research selection criteria, the original 882 apps were narrowed down to 497 apps that were included in the analysis. Results: Approximately 60% of the analyzed diabetes apps requested potentially dangerous permissions, which pose a significant risk to users' data privacy. In addition, 28.4% (141/497) of the apps did not provide a website for their privacy policy. Moreover, it was found that 40.0% (199/497) of the apps contained advertising, and some apps that claimed not to contain advertisements actually did. Ninety-five percent of the apps were free, and those belonging to the "medical" and "health and fitness" categories were the most popular. However, app users do not always realize that the free apps' business model is largely based on advertising and, consequently, on sharing or selling their private data, either directly or indirectly, to unknown third parties. Conclusions: The aforementioned findings confirm the necessity of educating patients and health care providers and raising their awareness regarding the privacy aspects of diabetes apps. Therefore, this research recommends properly and comprehensively training users, ensuring that governments and regulatory bodies enforce strict data protection laws, devising much tougher security policies and protocols in Android and in the Google Play Store, and implicating and supervising all stakeholders in the apps' development process. JMIR Diabetes 2021;6(1):e16146 doi:10.2196/16146 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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6. Connected Mental Health: Systematic Mapping Study.
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Drissi, Nidal, Ouhbi, Sofia, Idrissi, Mohammed Abdou Janati, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Ghogho, Mounir, and Janati Idrissi, Mohammed Abdou
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MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL technology ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,YOUTH health ,MEDICAL care research - Abstract
Background: Although mental health issues constitute an increasing global burden affecting a large number of people, the mental health care industry is still facing several care delivery barriers such as stigma, education, and cost. Connected mental health (CMH), which refers to the use of information and communication technologies in mental health care, can assist in overcoming these barriers.Objective: The aim of this systematic mapping study is to provide an overview and a structured understanding of CMH literature available in the Scopus database.Methods: A total of 289 selected publications were analyzed based on 8 classification criteria: publication year, publication source, research type, contribution type, empirical type, mental health issues, targeted cohort groups, and countries where the empirically evaluated studies were conducted.Results: The results showed that there was an increasing interest in CMH publications; journals were the main publication channels of the selected papers; exploratory research was the dominant research type; advantages and challenges of the use of technology for mental health care were the most investigated subjects; most of the selected studies had not been evaluated empirically; depression and anxiety were the most addressed mental disorders; young people were the most targeted cohort groups in the selected publications; and Australia, followed by the United States, was the country where most empirically evaluated studies were conducted.Conclusions: CMH is a promising research field to present novel approaches to assist in the management, treatment, and diagnosis of mental health issues that can help overcome existing mental health care delivery barriers. Future research should be shifted toward providing evidence-based studies to examine the effectiveness of CMH solutions and identify related issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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7. Jeux d’entraînement comparés aux exercices autorégulés avec manuel d’instruction pour améliorer l’adhésion : étude randomisée contrôlée
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Kool, Jan, Oesch, Peter, Hilfiker, Roger, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Evertsen, Gunn, Brox, Ellen, and Bachmann, Stefan
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Améliorer la mobilité des personnes âgées est un des buts principaux de la réadaptation gériatrique. Les exercices autorégulés avec des manuels d’instruction sont utilisés pour accroître le volume d’entraînement, mais l’adhésion aux instructions est souvent faible. Les jeux d’entraînement peuvent améliorer l’adhésion. Cette étude a donc comparé les jeux d’entraînement aux exercices autorégulés avec manuels d’instruction.
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- 2017
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8. Exploring the Use of Educational Video Games as self-management tools for Children and Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.
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Lauritzen, Jonas, Årsand, Eirik, Horsch, Alexander, Fernandez.-Luque, Luis, Chomutare, Taridzo, Gustav Bellika, Johan, Hejlesen, Ole, and Hartvigsen, Gunnar
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VIDEO games & children ,DIABETES ,HEALTH education ,DIABETES in children ,DIABETES in adolescence ,VIDEO games - Abstract
The article focuses on a study which examined the use of educational video games as self-assessment tools for children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes mellitus. To determine the success factors of the games, popular causal game with social media integration for children and adolescents on Facebook, a social networking site, were analyzed. The study shows the effectiveness of educational ganes for education children and adolescents about their condition.
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- 2011
9. Facebook use leads to health-care reform in Taiwan
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Syed-Abdul, Shabbir, Lin, Che-Wei, Scholl, Jeremiah, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Jian, Wen-Shan, Hsu, Min-Huei, Liou, Der-Ming, and Li, Yu-Chuan
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- 2011
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10. Identifying Measures Used for Assessing Quality of YouTube Videos with Patient Health Information: A Review of Current Literature.
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Gabarron, Elia, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Armayones, Manuel, and Lau, Annie Y. S.
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STREAMING video & television ,PATIENT education ,HEALTH education research ,INTERNET ,HEALTH - Abstract
Background: Recent publications on YouTube have advocated its potential for patient education. However, a reliable description of what could be considered quality information for patient education on YouTube is missing. Objective: To identify topics associated with the concept of quality information for patient education on YouTube in the scientific literature. Methods: A literature review was performed in MEDLINE, ISI Web of Knowledge, Scopus, and PsychINFO. Abstract selection was first conducted by two independent reviewers; discrepancies were discussed in a second abstract review with two additional independent reviewers. Full text of selected papers were analyzed looking for concepts, definitions, and topics used by its authors that focused on the quality of information on YouTube for patient education. Results: In total, 456 abstracts were extracted and 13 papers meeting eligibility criteria were analyzed. Concepts identified related to quality of information for patient education are categorized as expert-driven, popularity-driven, or heuristic-driven measures. These include (in descending order): (1) quality of content in 10/13 (77%), (2) view count in 9/13 (69%), (3) health professional opinion in 8/13 (62%), (4) adequate length or duration in 6/13 (46%), (5) public ratings in 5/13 (39%), (6) adequate title, tags, and description in 5/13 (39%), (7) good description or a comprehensive narrative in 4/13 (31%), (8) evidence-based practices included in video in 4/13 (31%), (9) suitability as a teaching tool in 4/13 (31%), (10) technical quality in 4/13 (31%), (11) credentials provided in video in 4/13 (31%), (12) enough amount of content to identify its objective in 3/13 (23%), and (13) viewership share in 2/13 (15%). Conclusions: Our review confirms that the current topics linked to quality of information for patient education on YouTube are unclear and not standardized. Although expert-driven, popularity-driven, or heuristic-driven measures are used as proxies to estimate the quality of video information, caution should be applied when using YouTube for health promotion and patient educational material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Misleading Health-Related Information Promoted Through Video-Based Social Media: Anorexia on YouTube.
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Syed-Abdul, Shabbir, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Jian, Wen-Shan, Li, Yu-Chuan, Crain, Steven, Hsu, Min-Huei, Wang, Yao-Chin, Khandregzen, Dorjsuren, Chuluunbaatar, Enkhzaya, Nguyen, Phung Anh, and Liou, Der-Ming
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SOCIAL media research ,ANOREXIA nervosa ,HEALTH promotion ,STREAMING video & television ,EATING disorders - Abstract
Introduction: The amount of information being uploaded onto social video platforms, such as YouTube, Vimeo, and Veoh, continues to spiral, making it increasingly difficult to discern reliable health information from misleading content. There are thousands of YouTube videos promoting misleading information about anorexia (eg, anorexia as a healthy lifestyle). Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate anorexia-related misinformation disseminated through YouTube videos. Methods: We retrieved YouTube videos related to anorexia using the keywords anorexia, anorexia nervosa, proana, and thinspo on October 10, 2011.Three doctors reviewed 140 videos with approximately 11 hours of video content, classifying them as informative, pro-anorexia, or others. By informative we mean content describing the health consequences of anorexia and advice on how to recover from it; by pro-anorexia we mean videos promoting anorexia as a fashion, a source of beauty, and that share tips and methods for becoming and remaining anorexic. The 40 most-viewed videos (20 informative and 20 pro-anorexia videos) were assessed to gauge viewer behavior. Results: The interrater agreement of classification was moderate (Fleiss' kappa=0.5), with 29.3% (n=41) being rated as pro-anorexia, 55.7% (n=78) as informative, and 15.0% (n=21) as others. Pro-anorexia videos were favored 3 times more than informative videos (odds ratio [OR] 3.3, 95% CI 3.3-3.4, P<.001). Conclusions: Pro-anorexia information was identified in 29.3% of anorexia-related videos. Pro-anorexia videos are less common than informative videos; however, in proportional terms, pro-anorexia content is more highly favored and rated by its viewers. Efforts should focus on raising awareness, particularly among teenagers, about the trustworthiness of online information about beauty and healthy lifestyles. Health authorities producing videos to combat anorexia should consider involving celebrities and models to reach a wider audience. More research is needed to study the characteristics of pro-anorexia videos in order to develop algorithms that will automatically detect and filter those videos before they become popular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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12. Pro-Anorexia and Pro-Recovery Photo Sharing: A Tale of Two Warring Tribes.
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Yom-Tov, Elad, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Weber, Ingmar, and Crain, Steven P.
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ANOREXIA nervosa ,MEDICAL informatics ,ONLINE social networks ,VIRTUAL communities ,PHOTOGRAPH websites ,APPETITE disorders ,COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Background: There is widespread use of the Internet to promote anorexia as a lifestyle choice. Pro-anorexia content can be harmful for people affected or at risk of having anorexia. That movement is actively engaged in sharing photos on social networks such as Flickr. Objective: To study the characteristics of the online communities engaged in disseminating content that encourages eating disorders (known as "pro-anorexia") and to investigate if the posting of such content is discouraged by the posting of recovery-oriented content. Methods: The extraction of pro-anorexia and pro-recovery photographs from the photo sharing site Flickr pertaining to 242,710 photos from 491 users and analyzing four separate social networks therein. Results: Pro-anorexia and pro-recovery communities interact to a much higher degree among themselves than what is expected from the distribution of contacts (only 59-72% of contacts but 74-83% of comments are made to members inside the community). Pro-recovery users employ similar words to those used by pro-anorexia users to describe their photographs, possibly in order to ensure that their content appears when pro-anorexia users search for images. Pro-anorexia users who are exposed to comments from the opposite camp are less likely to cease posting pro-anorexia photographs than those who do not receive such comments (46% versus 61%), and if they cease, they do so approximately three months later. Our observations show two highly active communities, where most interaction is within each community. However, the pro-recovery community takes steps to ensure that their content is visible to the pro-anorexia community, both by using textual descriptions of their photographs that are similar to those used by the pro-anorexia group and by commenting to pro-anorexia content. The latter activity is, however, counterproductive, as it entrenches pro-anorexia users in their stance. Conclusions: Our results highlight the nature of pro-anorexia and pro-recovery photo sharing and accentuate the need for clinicians to be aware of such content and its effect on their patients. Our findings suggest that some currently used interventions are not useful in helping pro-anorexia users recover. Thus, future work should focus on new intervention methods, possibly tailored to individual characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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13. ePatients on YouTube: Analysis of Four Experiences From the Patients' Perspective.
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Gómez-Zúñiga, Beni, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Pousada, Modesta, Hernández-Encuentra, Eulàlia, and Armayones, Manuel
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STREAMING video & television ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,HEALTH behavior ,SENSORY perception ,EVERYDAY life ,PRIVACY - Abstract
Background: Many patients share their personal experiences and opinions using online video platforms. These videos are watched by millions of health consumers and health care professionals. Although it has become a popular phenomenon, little is known about patients who share videos online and why they do so. Objective: We aimed to explore the motivations and challenges faced by patients who share videos about their health and experiences on YouTube. As part of a conference discussion, we asked several patients actively engaged on YouTube to make a video explaining their motivations. This paper discusses these videos. Methods: In this qualitative study, we performed an analysis of the videos created by 4 patients about their self-reported motivations and challenges they face as YouTube users. First, two judges compared the transcriptions and decided the exact wording when confusing content was found. Second, two judges categorized the content of the videos to identify the major themes. Results: Four main categories emerged: (1) the origin or cause for making the first video, (2) the objectives that they achieve by continuing to make videos, (3) the perception of community, and (4) the negative consequences of the experience. Conclusions: The main reason for making videos was to bridge the gap between traditional health information about their diseases and everyday life. The first consequence of sharing their life on YouTube was a loss of privacy. However, they also experienced the positive effects of expressing their feelings, being part of a large community of peers, and helping others to deal with a chronic condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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14. HealthTrust: a social network approach for retrieving online health videos.
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Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Karlsen, Randi, and Melton, Genevieve B
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Background: Social media are becoming mainstream in the health domain. Despite the large volume of accurate and trustworthy health information available on social media platforms, finding good-quality health information can be difficult. Misleading health information can often be popular (eg, antivaccination videos) and therefore highly rated by general search engines. We believe that community wisdom about the quality of health information can be harnessed to help create tools for retrieving good-quality social media content.Objectives: To explore approaches for extracting metrics about authoritativeness in online health communities and how these metrics positively correlate with the quality of the content.Methods: We designed a metric, called HealthTrust, that estimates the trustworthiness of social media content (eg, blog posts or videos) in a health community. The HealthTrust metric calculates reputation in an online health community based on link analysis. We used the metric to retrieve YouTube videos and channels about diabetes. In two different experiments, health consumers provided 427 ratings of 17 videos and professionals gave 162 ratings of 23 videos. In addition, two professionals reviewed 30 diabetes channels.Results: HealthTrust may be used for retrieving online videos on diabetes, since it performed better than YouTube Search in most cases. Overall, of 20 potential channels, HealthTrust's filtering allowed only 3 bad channels (15%) versus 8 (40%) on the YouTube list. Misleading and graphic videos (eg, featuring amputations) were more commonly found by YouTube Search than by searches based on HealthTrust. However, some videos from trusted sources had low HealthTrust scores, mostly from general health content providers, and therefore not highly connected in the diabetes community. When comparing video ratings from our reviewers, we found that HealthTrust achieved a positive and statistically significant correlation with professionals (Pearson r₁₀ = .65, P = .02) and a trend toward significance with health consumers (r₇ = .65, P = .06) with videos on hemoglobinA(1c), but it did not perform as well with diabetic foot videos.Conclusions: The trust-based metric HealthTrust showed promising results when used to retrieve diabetes content from YouTube. Our research indicates that social network analysis may be used to identify trustworthy social media in health communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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15. HealthTrust: A Social Network Approach for Retrieving Online Health Videos.
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Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Karlsen, Randi, and Melton, Genevieve B.
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ONLINE social networks ,STREAMING video & television ,INTERNET in medicine ,MEDICAL quality control - Abstract
Background: Social media are becoming mainstream in the health domain. Despite the large volume of accurate and trustworthy health information available on social media platforms, finding good-quality health information can be difficult. Misleading health information can often be popular (eg, antivaccination videos) and therefore highly rated by general search engines. We believe that community wisdom about the quality of health information can be harnessed to help create tools for retrieving good-quality social media content. Objectives: To explore approaches for extracting metrics about authoritativeness in online health communities and how these metrics positively correlate with the quality of the content. Methods: We designed a metric, called HealthTrust, that estimates the trustworthiness of social media content (eg, blog posts or videos) in a health community. The HealthTrust metric calculates reputation in an online health community based on link analysis. We used the metric to retrieve YouTube videos and channels about diabetes. In two different experiments, health consumers provided 427 ratings of 17 videos and professionals gave 162 ratings of 23 videos. In addition, two professionals reviewed 30 diabetes channels. Results: HealthTrust may be used for retrieving online videos on diabetes, since it performed better than YouTube Search in most cases. Overall, of 20 potential channels, HealthTrust's filtering allowed only 3 bad channels (15%) versus 8 (40%) on the YouTube list. Misleading and graphic videos (eg, featuring amputations) were more commonly found by YouTube Search than by searches based on HealthTrust. However, some videos from trusted sources had low HealthTrust scores, mostly from general health content providers, and therefore not highly connected in the diabetes community. When comparing video ratings from our reviewers, we found that HealthTrust achieved a positive and statistically significant correlation with professionals (Pearson r
10 = .65, P = .02) and a trend toward significance with health consumers (r7 = .65, P = .06) with videos on hemoglobinA1c , but it did not perform as well with diabetic foot videos. Conclusions: The trust-based metric HealthTrust showed promising results when used to retrieve diabetes content from YouTube. Our research indicates that social network analysis may be used to identify trustworthy social media in health communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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16. Features of Mobile Diabetes Applications: Review of the Literature and Analysis of Current Applications Compared Against Evidence-Based Guidelines.
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Chomutare, Taridzo, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Årsand, Eirik, and Hartvigsen, Gunnar
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MOBILE health ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,DIABETES ,INSULIN ,BLOOD sugar - Abstract
Background: Interest in mobile health (mHealth) applications for self-management of diabetes is growing. In July 2009, we found 60 diabetes applications on iTunes for iPhone; by February 2011 the number had increased by more than 400% to 260. Other mobile platforms reflect a similar trend. Despite the growth, research on both the design and the use of diabetes mHealth applications is scarce. Furthermore, the potential influence of social media on diabetes mHealth applications is largely unexplored. Objective: Our objective was to study the salient features of mobile applications for diabetes care, in contrast to clinical guideline recommendations for diabetes self-management. These clinical guidelines are published by health authorities or associations such as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence in the United Kingdom and the American Diabetes Association. Methods: We searched online vendor markets (online stores for Apple iPhone, Google Android, BlackBerry, and Nokia Symbian), journal databases, and gray literature related to diabetes mobile applications. We included applications that featured a component for self-monitoring of blood glucose and excluded applications without English-language user interfaces, as well as those intended exclusively for health care professionals. We surveyed the following features: (1) self-monitoring: (1.1) blood glucose, (1.2) weight, (1.3) physical activity, (1.4) diet, (1.5) insulin and medication, and (1.6) blood pressure, (2) education, (3) disease-related alerts and reminders, (4) integration of social media functions, (5) disease-related data export and communication, and (6) synchronization with personal health record (PHR) systems or patient portals. We then contrasted the prevalence of these features with guideline recommendations. Results: The search resulted in 973 matches, of which 137 met the selection criteria. The four most prevalent features of the applications available on the online markets (n = 101) were (1) insulin and medication recording, 63 (62%), (2) data export and communication, 61 (60%), (3) diet recording, 47 (47%), and (4) weight management, 43 (43%). From the literature search (n = 26), the most prevalent features were (1) PHR or Web server synchronization, 18 (69%), (2) insulin and medication recording, 17 (65%), (3) diet recording, 17 (65%), and (4) data export and communication, 16 (62%). Interestingly, although clinical guidelines widely refer to the importance of education, this is missing from the top functionalities in both cases. Conclusions: While a wide selection of mobile applications seems to be available for people with diabetes, this study shows there are obvious gaps between the evidence-based recommendations and the functionality used in study interventions or found in online markets. Current results confirm personalized education as an underrepresented feature in diabetes mobile applications. We found no studies evaluating social media concepts in diabetes self-management on mobile devices, and its potential remains largely unexplored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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17. Review of Extracting Information From the Social Web for Health Personalization.
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Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Karlsen, Randi, and Bonander, Jason
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WEB personalization ,MEDICAL informatics ,COMPUTERS in medicine ,WEB development ,MEDICAL care research ,PATIENTS - Abstract
In recent years the Web has come into its own as a social platform where health consumers are actively creating and consuming Web content. Moreover, as the Web matures, consumers are gaining access to personalized applications adapted to their health needs and interests. The creation of personalized Web applications relies on extracted information about the users and the content to personalize. The Social Web itself provides many sources of information that can be used to extract information for personalization apart from traditional Web forms and questionnaires. ..ASA This paper provides a review of different approaches for extracting information from the Social Web for health personalization. We reviewed research literature across different fields addressing the disclosure of health information in the Social Web, techniques to extract that information, and examples of personalized health applications. In addition, the paper includes a discussion of technical and socioethical challenges related to the extraction of information for health personalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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18. Leaks and threats to patient data
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Shabbir, Syed Abdul, Fernandez-Luque, Luis, Li, Yu-Chuan, Hsu, Min-Huei, Lee, Pei-San, and Chiu, Wen-Ta
- Published
- 2011
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