Friday, October 12, 2007

McNeil posts children's med withdrawal info on Tylenol.com homepage

McNeil posts children's med withdrawal info on Tylenol.com homepage

McNeil is once again being proactive in its approach to safety and online patient communication. In the wake of voluntarily withdrawing certain infants' cough and cold products from the market because of the risk overdose, the company has updated Tylenol.com to address the issue head-on. News of the withdrawal is featured front and center on the site's homepage, along with the statement "Your child's safety is our number one priority." Below the statement is a brief explanation of the withdrawal and a link to "learn more." The link takes users to a page that features a bolded, bulleted list of the medicines affected by the recall as well as a toll-free number for questions and a coupon for a different product because the company "realize[s] these changes may be inconvenient." The mantra about "your child's safety" is repeated at the top and bottom of the page.

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Kids and Teens: Virtual Worlds Open New Universe

Kids and Teens: Virtual Worlds Open New Universe

For marketers trying to figure out how to reach kids and teens on social networking sites, there is a new game in town: virtual worlds.
The Kids and Teens Online report analyzes the ever-changing trends and forces affecting marketing to the 3-to-18-year-old segment.
eMarketer estimates that 24% of the 34.3 million child and teen Internet users in the US will use virtual worlds on at least a monthly basis in 2007. By 2011, 53% of them will be going virtual.

To purchase report: http://www.emarketer.com/Report.aspx?code=emarketer_2000437&src=report5_head_info_newsltr

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New social network for physicians aims for fun as well as business

New social network for physicians aims for fun as well as business

The healthcare and medical job board AbsolutelyHealthCare.com has launched www.MedicalMingle.com, a social network and virtual community for people working in or studying healthcare. The free site aims to be a fun place where people in the healthcare field can interact, either socially or professionally. On the professional side, resources include healthcare news, career information, and journal downloads. On the social side, members can use the site for dating, photo and video sharing, and travel research. Several social-networking sites just for physicians have launched recently, and MedicalMingle.com is definitely one of the least clinically focused. Others include Curbside Communities and Tiromed.com.

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Service links doc beliefs, behavior for pharma relationship tracking

Service links doc beliefs, behavior for pharma relationship tracking

A new service aims to allow pharma companies to track their relationships with important physicians and stakeholders. Each Key Relationships Tracker (KRT) from Synovate Healthcare will focus on a specific disease area and stakeholder type. For example, the first KRT will focus on doctor-pharma relationships in the hematological malignancies therapy area. KRT measures will include perceptions of companies' image, products and services, and the affect these perceptions have on stakeholder behavior. The company says KRTs produce actionable global data that's based on a methodology that links beliefs to behavior. Last year, Synovate Healthcare added online physician panels in key Asian markets, allowing its clients to access these doctors for online surveys

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Avenue A | Razorfish gives insight for creating online experience of Flufacts.com

Avenue A | Razorfish gives insight for creating online experience of Flufacts.com

Marketers should focus on building better online brands by thinking beyond isolated Web sites and banner ads, according to a new study from Avenue A | Razorfish. Through a survey of 500 U.S. consumers across demographics, the agency found that marketers should design entire online experiences rather than Web sites alone. "When we worked with Roche on Flufacts.com, we took the entire consumer 'knowledge-cycle' into account instead of focusing on a specific task that consumers had," Brian Crooks, executive creative director with the Philadelphia office of Avenue A | Razorfish, tells ePharm5.

"This helped us not only see the need for Flufacts.com to exist as a resource that helps educate consumers about the flu, but to map out an entire experience that starts before they visit that site and lasts long after. This journey includes multiple Web sites, searches, and alerts."

The study findings are available in Digital Design Outlook: Fast Forward–Design for Constant Change, a 100-page report featuring recommendations for engaging with consumers through emerging technologies.

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Monday, October 08, 2007

Washington Post: Real Hope in a Virtual World -- Online Identities Leave Limitations Behind

Real Hope in a Virtual World:
Online Identities Leave Limitations Behind

Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, October 6, 2007; Page A01
 
 
After suffering a devastating stroke four years ago, Susan Brown was left in a wheelchair with little hope of walking again. Today, the 57-year-old Richmond woman has regained use of her legs and has begun to reclaim her life, thanks in part to encouragement she says she gets from an online "virtual world" where she can walk, run and even dance.

Roberto Salvatierra, long imprisoned in his home by his terror over going outdoors, has started venturing outside more after gaining confidence by first tentatively exploring the three-dimensional, interactive world on the Internet.

John Dawley III, who has a form of autism that makes it hard to read social cues, learned how to talk with people more easily by using his computer-generated alter ego to practice with other cyber-personas.

Brown, Salvatierra and Dawley are just a few examples of an increasing number of sick, disabled and troubled people who say virtual worlds are helping them fight their diseases, live with their disabilities and sometimes even begin to recover. Researchers say they are only starting to appreciate the impact of this phenomenon.

"We're at a major technical and social transition with this technology. It has very recently started to become a very big deal, and we haven't by any means digested what the implications are," said William Sims Bainbridge, a social scientist at the National Science Foundation.

In addition to helping individual patients, virtual worlds are being used for a host of other health-related purposes. Medical schools are using them to train doctors. Health departments are using them to test first responders. Researchers are using them to gain insights into how epidemics spread. Health groups are using them to educate the public and raise money.

These increasingly sophisticated online worlds enable people to create rich virtual lives through "avatars" -- identities they can tailor to their desires: Old people become young. Infirm people become vibrant. Paralyzed people become agile.

They walk, run, and even fly and "teleport" around vast realms offering shopping malls, bars, homes, parks and myriad other settings with trees swaying in the wind, fog rolling in and an occasional deer prancing past. They schmooze, flirt and comfort one another using lifelike shrugs, slouches, nods and other gestures while they type instant messages or talk directly through headsets.

Because the full-color, multifaceted nature of the experience offers so much more "emotional bandwidth" than traditional Web sites, e-mail lists and discussion groups, users say the experience can feel astonishingly real. Participants develop close relationships and share intimate details even while, paradoxically, remaining anonymous. Some say they open up in ways they never would in face-to-face encounters in real support groups, therapy sessions, or even with family and close friends in their true lives.

"You're in this imaginary world. People don't know much about who you really are. In that anonymity, in that almost dreamlike state, people express things about themselves they may not otherwise," said John Suler, who studies the psychology of the Internet at Rider University in New Jersey, noting the experience can be especially useful for people with disabilities and those in remote areas where support groups or therapists are far away.

While the emergence of these worlds has generated controversy over the gender-bending, sexually outrageous, profiteering and even violent virtual behavior of some participants, their usefulness for meeting health needs has just begun to draw attention.

"There is a fundamental irony here," said Thomas H. Murray of the Hastings Center, a medical ethics think tank in Garrison, N.Y. "Avatars tend to be young, beautiful, and never age or get sick. But at the same time they can serve as an important way to share information about health."

Murray and others, however, worry that participants may neglect potentially more helpful real-life relationships, or have unrealistic expectations about what virtual worlds can do. Users and health-care providers may be rushing ahead, they say, without validating the usefulness of these worlds or identifying the dangers.

"We've seen the power of the Internet and what it can do," said Albert "Skip" Rizzo, a University of Southern California psychologist who treats traumatized Iraq war veterans with virtual reality. "But as we all know there can also be negative consequences. We really need to step back and think, 'What are the practical and ethical things we can do in the area of health, and what can't we do?' "

The emotional punch of virtual worlds make them fertile breeding grounds for false, misleading and possibly dangerous information. Sick, lonely and psychologically fragile people are particularly vulnerable.

"You have the same risks as elsewhere on the Internet," Murray said. "A lot of the information is garbage. There is always the possibility fraudsters will try to gain people's confidence to peddle phony cures or otherwise do things that are not in people's interests."

Still, an increasing number of major health organizations are trying to take advantage of virtual worlds for public health education, patient support and fundraising.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tested a small "office" in the popular virtual world Second Life "staffed" by Hygeia Philo, an avatar named after the Greek goddess of health, and is now planning a bigger, permanent presence. The American Cancer Society has an elaborate "island" offering virtual lectures by avatar doctors, support group meetings and other activities, such as an annual fundraising marathons that last year raised more than $115,000 in real money. The March of Dimes is building a virtual neonatal intensive-care unit to warn about the dangers of preterm births. The National Library of Medicine is helping fund HealthInfo Island, where users can get reliable medical information.

Meanwhile, scientists are beginning to study virtual worlds for insights into real-life health problems. Two teams analyzed a virtual epidemic of "corrupted blood" that devastated the World of Warfare online game for clues to how people might react during a real pandemic. Another examined a pox that infects avatars in a children's virtual world called Whyville, which the CDC is using to learn better ways to boost pediatric flu vaccination rates in the real world.

Medical schools and health departments have also started using virtual worlds. A University of California psychiatrist developed a virtual psych ward echoing with disembodied voices to help caregivers better understand schizophrenia. Stanford University doctors built virtual operating and emergency rooms to train young doctors. Britain's National Health Service constructed an entire virtual hospital.

So much is happening in virtual worlds that researchers at Harvard Medical School are planning to explore the possibilities at a seminar later this month, and the National Defense University in Washington is hosting a conference next month about ways that federal agencies, including the CDC and the National Institutes of Health, can use the phenomenon.

Individual practitioners, meanwhile, are discovering virtual worlds on their own. After meeting other health-care professionals in Second Life, which with 9 million members is among the largest, Lawrence Whitehurst, a family doctor in Culpeper, Va., founded the Second Life Medical Association.

"I don't diagnose, and I don't treat. What I try to do is provide medical advice and support for people undergoing real-world medical problems," Whitehurst said.

Some therapists, however, have started using virtual worlds to treat patients for a host of problems, in both their real and virtual lives.

"It doesn't work for everybody, but it works for a large majority of patients," said Brenda Wiederhold of the Virtual Reality Medical Center in San Diego, who uses the virtual world DigitalSpace to help patients overcome fear of public speaking and severe shyness.

While Wiederhold said she treats only patients she has counseled in her office first, others are offering therapy to patients they have never met or know little about.

"My clients' problems range from domestic love tangles to complex and difficult real life situations," Elena Mangan, who counsels patients anonymously in Second Life from Britain, wrote in an e-mail.

Such anonymous counseling disturbs many therapists. Internet therapy denies counselors vital clues from subtle body language, affect and tone of voice, they say. And anonymity can carry risks.

"How do you ensure the patient's safety?" said Richard Bedrosian, a clinical psychologist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. "Suppose they say, 'I'm going to shoot my girlfriend or kill myself.' How do you protect that person? How do you intervene?"

But the biggest users of virtual worlds for health purposes so far appear to be individual patients. Dozens of support groups have formed by and for those with cancer, paralysis, strokes, depression, cerebral palsy, cystic fibrosis, autism and other ailments.

Susan Brown, the stroke victim, said encouragement from other survivors in Dreams, one of several protected areas in Second Life for people with disabilities, and the experience of seeing herself walking again, aided her recovery.

"It helped me visualize," Brown said through her avatar, Marie Hightower, during an interview in a virtual field near a virtual home she built in Dreams, as virtual butterflies flitted past. "I stumbled here just like I stumbled in RL [real life]," she typed.

Salvatierra, the agoraphobic, Dawley, the patient with Asperger syndrome, and others tell similar stories.

"It's kind of like getting your life back again, but even better in some ways," said Kathie Olson, 53, who uses a wheelchair, lives alone and rarely leaves her home near Salt Lake City. In Second Life, she roams about as Kat Klata, a curvy young brunette who runs the Dragon Inn nightclub. "I've met so many people. I can walk. I can dance. I can even fly. Without this I'd just be staring at four walls. Mentally it's helped me so much."

For Stephanie Koslow, 48, of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., her virtual life is helping sustain her as she fights advanced breast cancer.

"It's not real, but it's real in a way," said Koslow, whose avatar is a pink fox named Artistic Fimicoloud. "I might spend an afternoon trying on silly wings and laughing with friends. And laughter heals."

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HealthCentral's breast cancer network highlights voices of community

HealthCentral's breast cancer network highlights voices of community

In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, The HealthCentral Network's www.MyBreastCancerNetwork.com has launched a special feature highlighting and celebrating the voices of its community members. The feature will promote the perspectives and experiences of the people who constitute HealthCentral.com's breast cancer site, as well as promote awareness for the disease. Features of the site include a weekly comic strip based on the life of Keri Haberstroh, who died of breast cancer, and is narrated by the e-mails that she sent to family and friends during her treatment. The site also includes a section called Chemo Style, which is a photo gallery where patients share experiences and express their "chemo style," whether it be wearing head scarves, wigs, or being bald and proud. 
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