
1997 Partnerships
for Networked Consumer Health Information Conference
Post-Conference
Workshops and Panel Transcripts
April 17, 1997
Partnerships '97, with generous support from
the Annenberg School for Communication, was pleased to
offer post-conference sessions to improve skills and
knowledge about online health information.
1. Workshop A.
Online Self-Help Groups and Their Professional Allies.
Led by Tom Ferguson, M.D., Senior Associate, the Center
for Clinical Computing, Harvard University School of
Medicine. 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
This workshop was jointly led by veteran online
self-helpers and health professionals who facilitate,
organize, or otherwise play leading roles in online
self-help discussion groups, chat rooms, and other
interpersonal health information services. The workshop
explored cross-cutting issues and opportunities to enrich
online health information exchange.
2. Workshop B.
Health Communication and the World Wide Web. Led by HHS
staff and public and private health website developers.
9:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon.
This workshop examined effective health website
development in the context of HHS agency missions and
basic health communication principles. Examples were
drawn from HHS websites developed with a wide range of
resources, along with leading commercial health
information sites.
3. Workshop C.
Evaluation Issues in Consumer Health Informatics. Led by
Robert Hawkins, Ph.D., Professor, and Suzanne Pingree,
Ph.D., Professor, University of Wisconsin. 9:00 a.m. -
12:00 noon.
What new issues does interactive technology pose for
evaluation? Can we measure whether consumer health
applications are effective in improving health and
reducing unnecessary medical care? Why, when, and how can
we evaluate interactive health communication?
4. Panel:
Legislative and Policy Issues. Led by Kathleen Hall
Jamieson, Ph.D., Dean, Annenberg School for
Communication, Director, Annenberg Public Policy Center,
University of Pennsylvania. 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
A panel of policy experts, health professionals, and
representatives of industry discussed key issues being
addressed by Congress and the Administration, such as the
privacy of personal health information in a networked
environment, the regulation of personal health
decision-support applications, communication as a Quality
of Care issue, and the role of the Federal government in
the growing consumer health information marketplace.

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