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On Monday, the Los Angeles Times covered a study that appeared in a recent medical journal. The study looked at 271 blogs written by physicians or nurses (in 2006). Some highlights:
Also worth noting: according to study author Lagu, "bloggers' intentions are mostly good, but it's not clear all are doing enough to protect patients' privacy and to avoid undermining patients' trust in physicians." We tracked down the study (not linked by the Times): Link: alternate source (pdf; free)
Author: Tara Lagu, Elinore J. Kaufman, David A. Asch, and Katrina Armstrong
Publication: Journal of General Internal Medicine
Length: 3,544 words
Date: July, 23, 2008
The Times article also describes a medical blogging phenomenon referred to as Grand Rounds, "a weekly compilation of the Internet's best medical postings." They are "a free-wheeling collection of rants, shop talk, case studies and learned commentary." Here's the link (which the Times omitted): Grand Rounds. Also not mentioned in the article: there are similar weekly "best of" blog roundups for many different topics. These are often referred to as blog carnivals. Several bloggers were mentioned in the LA Times; here's our usual summary table:
Technorati Rank as of August 2, 2008 (or later)
The Times article: Subtitle: Web posts offer insight into the profession, but also raise patient privacy issues
Author: Melissa Healy
Publication: The Los Angeles Times
Section: Health
Length: 1,356 words
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