
1997 Partnerships
for Networked Consumer Health Information Conference
Transcripts of Plenary Sessions and
Breakout Sessions
Post Conference
Workshop A
Online Self-Help
Groups and Their Professional Allies
Thursday, April 17
9:00-12:00 PM
Tom Ferguson, M.D., Senior
Associate, Center for Clinical Computing, Harvard Medical
School, Austin, TX
Arlette Lefebvre,
Founder and Past President, Ability Online Network,
Toronto, Canada
Ferguson: This
workshop will deal with online self-help groups and their
professional allies. How can we link this resource
(online self-help) with our formal professional health
care system? Making this connection is a task that is
left to the individual. Health professionals don't know
that patients are taking advantage of this resource and
are not aware of its positive results.
I first heard of Glena online because
she had cancer. She started a self-help support group,
which consisted of about 23 people, all with cancer.
Glena called it "Living With Cancer Fun Group."
Welcome to fun time, jokes, and teasing. This support
came from people who were living with cancer who are not
living today. Glena would greet each person as they came
online. At first it was hard because everyone wanted to
send messages, or maybe I should say everyone wanted to
type at the same time, and that couldn't be done.
Eventually some order came to the group, and it became an
important support group.
The conversations were between this
group of people telling each other their conditions,
diseases (what type of cancer they had), treatments,
their feelings, their outlooks, etc. One person would say
humor feeds the soul; one would tell Glena she had a
radiant personality and Glena would say, "After all
this radiation treatment I am radiant." One person
asked if she glowed in the dark. Glena answered, "I
glow all the time."
More and more people are getting
involved in online self-help support groups -- lay people
as well as health professionals. Patients get much more
from these supportive networks than they get from health
professionals. They get the specific health information
that you might not get from health professionals,
practical advice to guide people through a wide range of
information, tips from people who are familiar with the
health problem, live chats, humor, friendship, caring --
and most of all -- acceptance.
I would like to leave you with three
questions:
- How can we make it easier to
connect and form online communities?
- What can we do to let health
professionals know that online self-help
communities exist and to get them to help start
them and support them?
- How can we link online communities
with clinical and hospital systems, and how can
the linkage continue? Now I will turn this
session over to Edward.
Edward J. Madara, The American
and New Jersey Self-Help Clearinghouses, Denville, NJ:
What can online self-help do? I want to give you a
glimpse of what is happening online.
I started my self-help group by giving
medical information to people with general medical
problems such as diabetes, cancer, or the flu. I started
by sending and answering e-mail messages and sharing the
information with other people. Now we have support groups
for people with any health problem -- alcoholism, phobias
-- and we even have Alcoholics Anonymous meetings online.
These online self-help groups provide hope and a variety
of other support mechanisms. It is an excellent way to
exchange information. There are LISTSERV and mailing list
services. I will now turn this presentation over to
Laurel Simmons.
Laurel Simmons, Founder, Bone
Marrow Transplant Mailing List, Cambridge, MA: I had a
bone marrow transplant some years back, and that is what
motivated me to start this organization. I would like to
tell you a story and read a little from an e-mail message
I received from a donor. She contacted us anonymously and
wanted to donate bone marrow to someone. She found a
recipient and had the transplant. She says it was a 5-6
match, which is normally found in family matches only.
She did not know the person and had never met her. After
the transplant the donor said she felt overjoyed.
Anonymous donors have a strong presence
on the Internet. The Internet enables people with bone
marrow problems to get answers to questions like,
"If I have a transplant, how much blood will I
lose?" "What kind of anesthesia should I
have?" Online support groups enable people to
articulate problems. Some people have trouble talking
about their problems and in asking questions; they break
down barriers for people who just want to come online and
listen. The only barrier may be some patients lack
of access to computers.
The Internet gives patients the
capacity to ask routine, basic questions that they might
not feel like asking their health professionals, and it
enables them to get a variety of opinions and related
stories from a person with the same health care problem.
It helps relieve the anxiety and anger; enables a person
to tell his or her feelings or moments of joy at any
time, day or night; and it provides a captive audience.
It also enables people to interact (you tell your story
and hear someone else's). The Internet can provide new
choices in health care, such as enabling patients to
become the providers of care by giving them options to
select from -- like choice of anesthesia or choice of a
particular type of medication. One person relates how she
reacted to certain medications and a certain type of
anesthesia, which may help another person with the same
illness who is trying to make a choice. Known bad
consequences are better than unknown bad consequences.
Acquisition of information relieves suspense from not
knowing.
Having mailing list services or
self-help group support services on the Internet helps
patients who are not willing to articulate their
feelings. It gives them the ability to deal with a
narrative of their illness and transmits medical
information from patient to patient.
What I would like is to make computers
accessible to seriously ill patients and families of
seriously ill patients. I would also like for them to be
utilized by doctors and nurses, so they can take part in
and help support the self-help groups -- and so they can
better understand that they should and can work better
with their patients.
Madara: I will now introduce
Samantha Scolamiero, who will speak about her
organization, Brain Tumor Mailing List.
Samantha Scolamiero, Founder and
Creator, Brain Tumor Mailing List, Cambridge, MA: I will
begin by saying I have brain damage, so I carry an extra
brain around with me. For the last couple of days this
has drained me, so please bear with me. I really need my
second brain today.
I founded a brain tumor mailing list
service. It is done by e-mail, which has low cost. Brain
injury is very hard to deal with; it is a struggle for me
to be here and to get my presentation together.
I will start by saying institutions
learn from data, their knowledge base is limited. The
Internet lets you be who you want to be. Things that can
be provided over the Internet for self-help health care
support groups are medical software, dissemination of
materials, and health forums. The online support benefits
are it:
- is low cost or free;
- helps doctors understand patients;
- breaks down social and
geographical barriers;
- breaks down clinical barriers;
- breaks down psychological barriers
and reduces anxiety by helping people cope with
health care problems;
- provides 24- hour-a-day access
with no commute, and also can be used with
adaptive equipment;
- provides allies -- all types of
doctors and different types of information. I
have talked to neurosurgeons across the country
about my condition, and it has helped make me
feel better and enabled me to better adjust to my
situation.
Brain mail list was created by
patients, and it will be more useful if it remains under
the ownership of patients rather than being dominated by
health care professionals. I started this in 1993 because
no one else was doing it. It is more effective than pen
pal programs and more efficient than newsletters. Online
is the best service I have ever seen; the electronic
community has the greatest value. It does not dehumanize;
it is changing the community for the 21st Century and
creating many allies.
Madara: Self-help onliners can
truly help people with health care problems. I would like
to share with you an e-mail letter I received. It was
from Robin, who was a diabetic and was having trouble
adjusting to the insulin she was taking. She sent e-mails
and soon learned about other types of insulin and their
side effects. She is now on a type that does not create
any adverse side effects. She has become an online
self-helper and says she enjoys this role because she
wants to give back what she received. Now I would like to
introduce Todd Woodward.
Todd Woodward, Depression
Self-Help Group Leader, America Online, Santa Clara, CA:
I don't want to talk about marketing or about how I am a
group leader today. I want to talk about community. Have
you ever awakened in the morning and just not wanted to
get up or go to work? Who do you talk to? Your doctor?
No, he will give you some rare facts about mood disorders
and give you Prozac. Friends will say you have the blues.
You just don't want to talk about it.
When someone has been diagnosed with a
condition that they don't want to talk about, or they now
have to take Prozac, which is not something you want to
tell everyone, who do they talk with? Try using the
computer, e-mail, news groups, or a bulletin board.
That's where I was at one point in my life, wondering who
I was going to talk to. But at America Online (AOL) I
started a group called Depression Support. People showed
up and started talking about being depressed. I, like
others, was curious as to what was happening to me, and
being online helped me as well as others to learn quite a
bit.
I would like to relay a story about a
person who was feeling very suicidal. I got these two
people together online, and they are now talking and
lifting each other up. They don't feel alone or
desperate; they are now among people who absolutely
understand what is going on. What do I do? I bring people
together so they can talk to each other. Basically, I
bring a community of people together who understands each
other; they have the same health care problem. They can
communicate with someone about their condition, their
feelings, etc. Mental health issues are especially hard
to talk about. I bring people together to deal with
mental health issues in Online Psych. I help people to
feel better about talking about the medications they are
taking, which is something they need, because that
medication has created negative side effects.
There is the traditional model of group
therapy, and this is where there is room to move.
We're not talking about technology; we
are talking about people getting together and sharing
information. The doctor does not know how to cope, and
people do. They can share together. I can talk about
technology all day, but I won't understand the problems
completely. Communities are the important aspect, and
they bring people together. Our society is changing, and
we don't have time to talk as we work 15 hours a day. A
great advantage of the Internet is that we can get online
at any time of the day.
With AOL, there are keyword searches,
and from these searches, you can find online help. Be
warned that it is all very commercial at times, and can
be there to make money. "Health Live" is the
index of all the different groups on AOL. I have started
a master schedule of all the self-help schedules that are
online. They don't have some listings, so I am the only
one that has made a master schedule. They don't list
unsanctioned groups. "Better Health" deals with
some issues, and I moved to Online Psych, as it deals
with more issues. AOL is easy to get into, and that can
make it bad, jokingly. It is easy -- my mother is even
online! It costs more, and technology isn't always there
for people, but it is easy to get around and get things
done on AOL.
Eventually we are getting more
opportunities to plug into the Internet. We have
companies like Netcom and Pipeline, making it even easier
to get online. You should be able to get more access to
the Internet. Thank you.
Madara: The father of sociology
did a study, and he attributed suicide to "lack of
community." On another note, I enjoy helping people
so I interact with them most of the time. We have brought
on many different volunteers where I am, and I needed
help with a wheelchair patient. I got online, and I asked
the question, "What do we do?" Within three
hours, I had three different messages from people
offering different techniques. We will conclude this
panel with a physician, Dr. Alan Douma, who will tell
stories that have been generated there.
Allen Douma, M.D., Health
Responsibility Systems, Herndon, VA: Thank you very much,
particularly Tom. I want to apologize for Elin not being
here, as she is more important to hear than I am, and she
is the founder of the Major Medical Network. I need to
know if you can help me -- how many here are health
professionals? Do you provide personal health care? How
many work for a larger university, agency, or
organization for health care? The good news is that Elin
is meeting with investors today, helping us pay for our
move forward.
I am a practicing physician now, but I
was trained as a computer nerd in the 60's.
Paradoxically, I have found that computer technologies
deliver the most humane systems, despite the fact that
there is no real human interaction. I will give a couple
of quotes: "I sat here, reading the posted notes,
and I wished that we were all neighbors. I was not alone
dealing with my child with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.
I now know that it is not only me who feels left out
in having to deal with this disorder. I cried and
cried."
The Major Medical Network is working
with many different challenges, whether they be online
support persons or physicians. However, the community is
what it is all about. We facilitate that community at the
Major Medical Network.
What is online support? It is the live
mutual support groups. We are now maxed out at 48 groups,
and we are getting the software to support 100. In
addition, you need to recognize that the support goes on
with posted messages. Message boards meet 7 days a week,
and we can deliver more information just by running
groups through the message board. We have 2,500 medical
topics that we can provide information on 24 hours a day.
We also have facilitators running the group who
themselves understand the problems but are not
necessarily health professionals. There are little group
facilitators as well with e-mail -- half of the e-mail on
CompuServe is support group related. We even have
interactive talk function as well.
In 1993, there were four online support
groups, and early in the year, we were getting about 10
messages a day. We were ecstatic at receiving a message
every hour. We now run 60,000 to 100,000 messages a
month, and we read all of them. Go online and read if you
want to learn something. If you really want to know what
is being said, go online. It is all there, whether it is
on the page or archived.
The community is very supportive of it,
as it is easy to use and because of the growing
perception that we need to get out of normal health care
delivery. Therefore, tremendous growth is going on. Part
of that growth is a reflection of the outcome. What is
important to me is the outcome of peoples
perceptions. If they feel better, they are better. Health
care is first about relieving problems, and second about
prolonging lives. Perception is a major part of
delivering the proper health care.
We did a survey, and we got thousands
of responses. There are questions related to self-help.
Here are a few of them:
- "Have you participated in
discussions in better health medical
network?" Thirty five percent said yes.
- "Have you participated in a
live online conference?" Thirty seven
percent said yes. We don't know if this is the
same group, but it gives about 80 percent
overlap.
- "Has self-help that assisted
you in coping been from 'self-help
sessions'?" Ninety percent said yes. That is
one of the outcomes -- that people are coming
back.
The proof is in the pudding. I would
like to take a couple of minutes to talk about where it
all goes. There is the same exponential growth curve as
is seen with the elderly who are now going online. My
mother has Alzheimer's and is in a mental institution,
but if she could have, she would have lived online. If we
can deliver, if we are greedy, or if we are graciously
giving, patients will still need to find a place where
they can trust and respect. They need to have easy access
and easy use, and we need to support these needs. Private
initiative is clinically important. We also need to
subsidize the delivery of these services to these people
and satisfy their need for protection.
Audience: Are there other groups
outside AOL and CompuServe?
John Grohol, Psy.D., Director,
Mental Health Net, Dublin, OH: We will be talking about
this more. I have a list of all groups on the Internet.
Audience: News.answers [on
USENET] has all kinds of information about LISTSERVS that
are available.
Audience: Is your LISTSERV
available to the public?
Douma: No, not right now.
Audience: About community, what
happens when people on the list die?
Simmons: The only thing that the
Internet does not allow us to do is to grieve, and that
is its downfall. On one of my first lists I had someone
die. There are services, but nothing like a memorial
service.
Lefebvre: I am a psychologist,
and we learn that people grieve all the time. Once, we
received 102 messages; they were a sort of memorial
service.
Audience: Two quick questions.
What is the average income of the subscribers, and how do
we assure that the messages are not reached by
"techies" and students who are simply doing
research?
Douma: Private messages cannot
be read by anyone. With public messages, while there are
employees with access, there is no way to secure them. I
would say the average AOL income is about $55,000. We
have some skewed data with low household incomes
reflecting the medical disabilities.
Scolamiero: I was not able to
get on the Internet as I couldn't afford it.
Madara: One last question
please.
Audience: To the people who are
involved with this -- where would you like to see things
go in the future?
Douma: I would like to see more
community control. The universal access is terrible, and
there is a need to foster the help of health care
professionals.
Ferguson: Again, we have a small
group so we can network with each other during the
breaks.

Linda Adler, Ph.D., Interactive
Technologies Initiative, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CA:
I come from Kaiser where we are developing a web site for
self-help groups. We have a huge membership community,
and our members are used to being a part of that
community. We have group visits as well -- something neat
and exciting where health care providers can come and see
people in a group, and they spend 3 hours with the group.
As a whole, Kaiser Permanente comes from a strong sense
of community. The electronic medium is an outbreak for
the community.
Samantha's earlier comment that
"We are watching you" does not relay the spirit
in which we edit these groups. We want people to feel
comfortable online, and we have worried so much about the
security, our concern sometimes interferes with being
online.
I am going to let the participants
introduce themselves this morning, continuing with Alan
Douma.
Douma: Deja vu all over again. I
will slow down this time, as you have heard all the
important stuff already. In talking about how health care
professionals can support online groups, there are many
things to be done and many different venues for doing
them. We need people to be leaders, whether in their
political, professional, or personal lives. Leaders move
us forward and have a positive influence, and a health
care professional can provide direct support. It is a
good thing to do. It should also be part of the
prescription that you get as a part of the medical
delivery system.
There is a plethora of opportunities
for accessing help, and it is the duty of the health care
professional to understand how this help is obtained and
to be able to point to a resource. And you can set up
your own self-help groups. Telephone was the first great
invention. It is more technological recently, but that
same kind of support is even more if the physician has
patients calling in for support online. As a physician, I
can say I have a web site, and only 15 percent of my
patients can log into that now, but this is only the
beginning. When the access becomes universally available,
you will have many more people able to go to your web
site.
You, within your own community, can
move forward as Kaiser is doing. There are some risks,
but you will be the leader in a year or so, telling
others about the resource.
Health care professionals are already
doing a hell of a lot. I will use the AOL statistics. The
number of people using AOL that are physicians is from
50,000 to 100,000. There are 250,000 health care
professionals on AOL. Health care professionals comprise
100,000 to 110,000 of those who are on the Better Health
Medical Network, being there as self-help ad hoc
professionals. Maybe they are not all health care
professionals, but they are helping as there isn't the
hucksterism we have in many other venues.
Community interaction is not paid for,
and it is the volunteers who share with the community
--helping 'til the early hours in the morning. Try to get
people to go online to at least see what the community is
doing. Tell them about it. At the same time we are
training students for the needs of people of tomorrow.
Something else to think about, which is probably the
biggest challenge, and is being talked about the most, is
the health care professional who is a resident expert. By
combining medicine and technology, the people with the
problems will have the expertise that many experts don't
have. Thank you.
Ferguson: I would like to have
some feedback. We are enthusiastically talking about the
interested people, but the population that needs to be
reflected is the one that isnt. A poll of a group
of health care professionals included four questions: are
you using e-mail, would you use it, etc.? What would you
guess that respondents said? Almost none use doctor to
patient e-mail. Maybe 30 percent thought they might, and
40 percent said they probably wouldn't. I would like your
advice and guidance Alan, to bring our fellow physicians
into this.
Douma: I think we need to focus
on what is in it for them. The patient care outcome is
the benefit, and until we can frame it in that way, we
can't get the federal Government to help us too. The
"I might do it" numbers are a start, and they
are the market to tap.
Audience: I work for American
Psychiatric Association Insurance, and the laws for
telemedicine aren't there yet. Until the state takes care
of this, I think we will see this development go slowly.
Audience: I would like to rebut
that. We have doctors that go on the phone every day, and
why would we need an outside agency to police this?
Audience: How would you like to
have to copy and paste a disclaimer all the time? I don't
have the time. I have too much to do, and I have a
family. I only have one patient using e-mail with me
anyway, and I advertise it in all my information.
Adler: I would now like to
introduce John Grohol.
Grohol: I am an online
psychologist, and I am the director of a nonprofit health
care group known as Mental Healthnet. I started in 1991,
as I needed to get online and find resources. A friend of
mine committed suicide, and I needed help as my social
support system. My family and friends were a thousand
miles away. To find a depression group was appropriate,
and I had a hard time trying to find it on the Internet.
This was before the World Wide Web, and it was primarily
news groups that were out there; there was very little
health-related information or support for consumers.
I did eventually find them, and I put
together an index, as no one was doing it. I started
developing an index and eventually web sites. Luckily the
president of a software developer saw the work I was
doing, and I was then hired to do the work there. That
started Mental Healthnet. We are in the top three mental
health sites, getting five to six thousand visitors a day
and a million hits in a year. We are very small but very
popular. There are two staff members total, but it is the
technology that allows us to provide this service. I then
took a proactive stance in finding resources online.
I went into some of the support groups,
and I started understanding how much information was out
there. I started acting as a consultant, correcting the
misinformation that was already out there. Here is our
home page on screen. There is simply a lot more to know
than is known on the street.
I then threw up a mental health
discussion forum, and we had 10 postings to it every day.
I created more discussion forums, and now we have more
than a dozen different forums on different mental health
disorders. We have self-started health forums as well,
enabling people to talk to themselves and help themselves
out. Here on the screen is a recent listing. The odd
thing is you can be anonymous on the web. There may be
numbers or nicknames, and there is no way of tracking
them. I have no idea who they are, and I don't care.
I see myself as a broker of technology,
offering the back office that provides the kinds of
resources to consumers. The thing is, support groups are
not new; they have existed for a while. Support groups
are an invaluable additional modality for people who live
in rural areas. In those areas you can't choose support
groups in downtown. In those situations, they are very
useful.
Going back to Mental Healthnet, we now
have it all catalogued, giving a qualitative guide, and
we label them in categories in terms of how well they
help in giving information. The other thing I do is host
Mental Health Chat, a question and answer session. I sit
in different places online and the questions I receive
are just general, but there is a lot of misinformation
given out. "Mental disorders are biologically
caused" is what I always hear. Well, there is no
research that says that. Mental disorders are a very
complex phenomena, and there are no real answers just
yet. But physicians don't realize that it is hard to ask
for help. I try and ease that.
I hear stories about physicians giving
incorrect information, and many times people ask me
questions instead of their own physicians. I don't know
why, but it is easier. These are the real examples of a
health care professional going into the Internet world
and helping. I am not practicing now, but if I were, I
would still be doing this, as I have a lot of technical
gumption. But there is a lot of information I don't know,
and there is information all over the online world still
to be gotten. It is relatively accurate and okay to point
patients to it. Physicians should let them know it is out
there.
Grohol: Here are the sites on
the web: Mental Health Net <http://www.cmhc.com>, Psych Central <http://www.grohol.com>. We are as well linked on other pages.
Audience: Who puts your glossary
together?
Grohol: It is an ongoing
process, but thanks to the software, it is easier to do
than it was before we had this technology.
Audience: What are some of the
negatives?
Grohol: The online world is
still a reflection of the real world, and there are
different ideas out there.
Madara: The online world is
self-reflection, and the advantage of the technology is
that people can get many resources on the same topic or
issue.
Audience: But there is a lot of
pain, and there are personal attacks in news groups.
Grohol: What you're speaking of
is the ease of attacking these news groups, which is
called "flaming," and it is not a unique news
group phenomenon. I would not do it on the street. Online
those social barriers to stop you aren't there, and
people say what is on the top of their heads. That is the
downside, and there may be people in public forums who do
this.
Adler: I would like to introduce
Arlette Lefebvre.
Lefebvre: I get e-mail from
children all the time, and I think we need more than
legislation. We need to be passionate about what we do,
and I do it because it is fun and it is so helpful.
I am a psychiatrist for children, and I
am now developing some web sites. Why bother? We can make
health care better, and with volunteers, we can
accomplish a lot.
My first experience with self-help was
personal. My brother was born with Down's syndrome, and
he now works part time. In Belgium, Danny loved our
little pedal car, and other kids started to bump the car
and throw crabs in the car with Danny, and he cried and
never got in again. A teenager then helped me get him
back into the car, teaching me how to avoid the bullies
and get help. I strongly believe that one good role model
is worth a thousand shrinks.
There are more differences about
self-help groups. There is practical help. You can get
the best technical expertise about, for instance, buying
a wheelchair, or how to sit in it, and only the people
who have been in that situation can teach you those
things. To participate as a person online it is important
to be a coach or broker of information.
The ABC's of online self-help are to:
(A)ctively participate in online self-help, (B)e yourself
as a professional, and (C)ommunicate facts, open
mindedness, and respect. It is important to not just pay
lip service.
Some guiding principles: Traditional
professionals think that they must know it all. The new
medical professional only needs to know how and where to
find it. You may not know much, and it may be one little
thing, but it could be useful to thousands of people.
Ability online is the group I have
started because I like introducing my kids to a good role
model. I constantly see parents of children with problems
who do not know of all the information that is in their
backyard.
I believe in three principles. The
first is that these online services be free for everyone,
as there are a lot of disabled people, blind people,
etc., with different types of computers and whom have
varying levels of skill. We need to build links between
people who are disabled and those whom are not. Here are
a few examples of the letters I receive from the children
on screen. Once I got a message from Jim Abbot, the
baseball player born with one hand. He heard about my
program and faxed me a letter saying that you can achieve
anything. He wanted his letter online. This young boy,
Mark, wrote back and now loves Jim Abbot. He wants to be
a baseball player. Second, we need to generate similar
experiences. And third, we need specific autonomy,
improving the proper information and making it ethical.
I invite all the great people I have
been to conferences with to come online with me, to
participate in conferences, and to have an equal
opportunity. Thank you.
Adler: We have one more
presentation. It is from Edward Madara.
Madara: Basically, while working
with Tom, I had more time to be on the Internet than he
did. In 1982 when I first got online, I had to borrow
$500 to get a Tandy computer, and I took my TV for a
monitor to the dismay of my children wanting to watch
cartoons.
I saw Georgia Griffith, and she ran the
issues disability forum. I later found out that she is
blind and deaf, and she runs it. She says that she isn't
disabled; it is the executives who can't use a computer
who are disabled.
There are still the bulletin services
(BBSes) and recovery net. There is Fidonet that connects
the health care BBSes, and there are 40 discussion groups
on the municipal bulletin boards. As John Grohol
mentioned, self-help groups are nothing new; we see
increasing numbers, and we see that people's needs drive
the system. This support is not prescribed, it is based
on people's needs. For example, with Gulf War syndrome
there were regular meetings of families suffering from
this online, and they pulled together and got the
Government to do something. We didn't have that with
Agent Orange. Or with the reoccurrence of polio when the
Government said that couldn't happen. They got together
online and said, "Yes, we have these symptoms."
Imagine if the AIDS crisis came 10 years later. The
response and support could have been so much more. It is
easier for health care professionals to get online to
utilize research. I would like to see more of a focus on
ethics, such as ethics committees, as many times students
interrupt these groups, making participants feel like zoo
animals for study. I would like to see regulation to
address ethical concerns.
What we have been doing is networking,
and I would like health care professionals gathering
together, professionals bringing people together in the
community. We had one woman with postpartum depression
who wanted another child, but was afraid of suffering
from her postpartum psychosis. We said don't do it alone,
and she now has started the first group on postpartum
depression. Now there are 100 of these groups. I could go
on forever with these types of examples of people with
different disabilities starting groups and getting
together and the help that was provided by these
opportunities.
This is how I see the role of the
professional. To help provide access, be an advocate for
access, and serve as a resource person to online groups.
I see the professional as someone who serves as a
consultant or advisor. An example is the ACHE group; it
has professionals who ran migraine studies. They are now
available to advise the organization as well as the
people online in this area.
You can serve as a guest speaker with
online groups where a one-to-one relationship with a
speaker becomes one-to-a thousand. We then archive these
discussions so people can go back to them later. The
professional can utilize online support to provide
referrals and help face-to-face (F2F) groups develop.
This person can serve as a networker for online groups
and involve groups in education, in that there are people
with disabilities who can teach classes online by their
experience. Students can then learn from patients who may
not be able to leave their homes. The professional or
expert can serve as a researcher, but "with"
groups, not "on" groups. The professional can
develop helpful consumer health information tools for or
with groups. This can be done right with the patients, as
the research trial group is in front of you. Another need
that must be met is that of groups and individuals. They
may need help in getting together. You can provide this
service by creating nesting areas, which are areas that
some hospitals have that serve to attract the people who
come together there. And then they can form self-help
groups. Most importantly, listen. Doctors must learn that
there is a lot to learn from self-help.
Ferguson: We can now take a
couple of questions.
Audience: I have a comment and
question. I feel that there are a lot of people doing
research that is unknown by others. Is anyone developing
ethical guidelines for this?
Grohol: The American
Psychologist Working Group is offering therapy online and
is working on guidelines to handle this.
Audience: The enforcement is
something that is going on, and now some people must
electronically sign something saying that they are not
from a pharmaceutical organization, not from an HMO, or
certain other organizations. It is quite clear that there
is enormous commercial volume, and the question arises,
why should these groups and HMOs take advantage of this?
Audience: I am worried about
issues relating to the self-help online becoming another
modality of treatment. Then the professionals get the
funding, and the people with the problem don't get the
funding to get this done.
Lefebvre: The social
responsibility is important, and I refuse to help without
sharing responsibility and credit from any work that
comes from it.
Audience: People should be
respected and not have control taken from them. The
tendency is to take control. We need to not take control
when we have it already.
Ferguson: The next session will
allow us to look at this in more depth. Much thanks to
the panel.

Ferguson: At this point I would
like a person from each interest group to give a summary
and feedback of what was discussed and what conclusions
you came to.
Lefebvre: We discussed how to
introduce people to the Net and get them online with new
experiences. Discussion was held on how to find support
groups, which was through message boards, e-mail, and
mailing lists. What if you don't find the group you are
looking for? We discussed how to start self-help support
groups; accessing information or networks; and accessing
certain areas that enable you to link with different
types of people. We discussed how to have access to
computers and how to help kids and adults learn to use
the computer. One way to get access is to ask
organizations who have computers if they are selling or
renting them. There need to be discussions about finding
a buddy or teacher to help you get online. Training
sessions in library and staff organizations is a start.
We discussed developing mentors and teachers to deal with
people who have no understanding of the use of a
computer.
Because there are self-help support
groups on the Net does not mean that people who need them
know how to access them. And we finally discussed how to
avoid being sued. You have to be clear about what your
group is; specify what you are about; and get other
people to say what you are about. That better assures
that you are safe.
Audience: How do you get
training on a computer?
Audience: There are computer
user classes all over the country, and they are willing
to help.
Renner: Discussions about the
Internet can be self correcting. There are not a lot of
rules. There are programs of major information but no
concrete solutions for getting it out. I will leave my
two web site addresses on the table for anyone interested
in a project I am about to start in creating a new
self-help web site.
Audience: We had discussions
about how to get equipment and services, and we also
discussed going to companies and manufacturers. Getting
equipment to the people who want to access the Net can be
done through personal delivery, Federal Express, or UPS.
We discussed the Minnesota State Government donating
computers to people who do not have access and who would
like to utilize the Internet.
Audience: We had discussions
concerning augmenting partnerships between self-help
groups and health care professionals. There is a barrier
between the self-help groups and health care
professionals that's like the Great Wall of China. We
decided we would like to see this barrier broken and see
an ongoing connection between the self-help support
groups and health care professionals/providers.
Ferguson: During these workshops
there are some people who have little or no chance to
participate. I would like to give everyone an opportunity
to state their names, say what companies they are
affiliated with, and the reasons why they have attended
this conference.

Breakout Group
2. On-line Self-Help Networks: Issues of Quality,
Respect, Authority, and Ownership
Thursday, April 17
2:00-3:30 PM
Simmons: Information is available in the
context of an interaction. If it is factual, it is pretty
easy to design. But medical facts are not actually
factual. In this case, we have medical fields where it is
easy to decide what is information and what is not.
Misinformation can come from the medical people. People
are trying to learn who or what is the source.
Renner: I would like to address
alternative medicine and make the point that you cannot
define the term. The New England Journal of Medicine
tells you what insurance will and will not pay for. I
have come up with five categories. My five categories are
home remedies, quacks, untested or unproven areas,
research or investigation, and proven areas that have
some kind of evidence. We need to get consumers and
patients on the same level on the playing field.
I am going to go back and talk about
home remedies. I am a great believer in home remedies --
the book I wrote on it had referenced 400 physicians. It
is accurate as of the time we wrote it. It does not have
everything in it. We had criteria. Chicken soup can be
fatal or safe. You could have misinformation in
categorizing, but you have to start with some categories.
Those five categories have kept me out of great
difficulty. If we were sitting here today and trying to
teach people how to navigate, would you use astrology or
a map? We tolerate a lot of things in the health care
field. We need to start getting people on the Internet,
and not just patients or consumers. Those five categories
have helped me to tell patients certain things. We have
people who are quite capable of playing games on the
Internet. Patients ask their doctors very critical
questions.
Audience: Physicians get mad
when patients ask them questions about an alternative to
medication.
Renner: We have got some
situations that are not good for doctors or patients.
Anyway, those five categories have kept me out of
trouble. I do use alternative medicine.
Audience: Some people want to
use it exclusively.
Audience: The owners of an
online support group -- what responsibility do they have
concerning the level of quality?
Simmons: I think that is a very
interesting question. I started my list when there were
very few people on the Internet. I come out of a culture
of computer hackers. I come out of being a patient with
disabilities. I just didn't think of it at all at the
time I started. I do very little censorship, but I'm not
sure that I shouldn't be spending more time censoring
than I have been. I have explored the laws, and in
Massachusetts, I am covered by the law. I feel a strong
responsibility to my subscribers. I take messages off for
two reasons: if they are mean, and if they contain
x-rated humor. X-rated humor I don't like. I have dropped
subscribers because the humor was getting a little too
raw.
Renner: There are groups that
give you instructions and tell you not to do what your
doctor says. Other people are reading that don't send in.
These types of occurrences can cause some mischief.
Audience: I have no way of
knowing the impact of these people. I don't know what I
should and should not be doing. I feel a responsibility
to respect my subscribers. That part of it is
self-correcting. Mine is a LISTSERV. I think that the
third party is going to be the subscriber. I don't see a
good mechanism for determining what should and should not
be acceptable content. Again we have to have more
control.
Grohol: Will you post a suicide
note?
Simmons: I think that I would do
that. I would call my personal psychiatrist and ask for
information. Todd probably has more information about
that. I have access to a lot of case work providers.
Audience: If you are running a
telephone system, and somebody called the operator and
said, "I am going to kill myself," will that
phone system act as a therapeutic line?
Simmons: I am very concerned
about data mining (people collecting archives where
employers can find information they can use to determine
whether to hire an individual). We need federal
regulations to prevent this. I would like to see
technologies and laws made to catch the lurkers.
Audience: If you get someone's
e-mail, you can get all the information about who is
hosting them. It is amazing the energy that some
individuals have.
Audience: On mental health, we
host only four mailing lists. All but one are
professionally oriented. We are not too concerned about
what health officials are talking about. It is like
therapy online. In terms of how we handle our
responsibility to readers, we would see that everyone has
a user license, and let it be known that we don't warrant
the information to be valid. It is a huge site. There is
a lot of information given out. One of our discussion
forums is called self-hurt. It is where self-mutilators
go to talk. We are supporting the ability to talk about
it and get it out in the open.
Grohol: Are any of you lurkers?
I think lurking is also learning. This is so new to
almost all of us. I did a book review on a subject
regarding a Government official being deceptive. I posted
this book review and got some people upset. I happened to
go to a meeting and met the guy who had said something
about me posting the review. There is an antipsychiatry
list. And most of those people are antidepression. There
is just lots of misinformation.
Audience: I think what you find
now is that each list has its own set of rules. These
rules all vary. Some are more closed.
Grohol: I was really surprised
at the openness of those kinds of discussions. Every
community is different.
Audience: That is why you have
to lurk -- so that you can violate. Talk radio is very
big. And they say that only 5 percent of the people do
not use it.
Simmons: About lurking before
you leap -- usually, if people are going to send you a
message, it is within only a day or two. Time is of the
essence. There is a lot of harm. Everyone has been
battered about things.
Grohol: We have a psychiatrist
who sends e-mail to people, and sometimes it can really
help. There is another part of the Internet that is going
to have a big ripple effect. It is called the intranet.
It is going to be a much more accurate source of
information. It is going to be heavily controlled.
Audience: Isn't that going to be
a closed network?
Grohol: It will become
professionally driven. A very good Internet site already
exists with multiple sources of information. We will have
different levels of quality. People won't waste their
time.
Audience: Having Columbia
information resource materials, that can be wonderful.
The list will always be there.
Grohol: Because they have so
many thousands of networked people, they should give out
several questions and answers.
Simmons: I am paranoid that the
insurance company is making reimbursements to people
because it is for something that is not
"professional," and it costs a lot less than,
say, an MRI. The physicians have really taken a switch.
They are not making medical decisions anymore.
Audience: I have heard of
insurance companies second-guessing the doctor. The
questions are, "Can he go home, and does he have to
go home today?"
Grohol: If we are talking about
self-help, why have we avoided the health record issue?
Simmons: The only person who
doesn't have access to my patient information file is me.
Every single Harvard medical student who is in
utilization reviews not only has access to my data, but
to my address and phone number. It is okay if my doctor
has it.
Audience: I don't think that it
has been a major issue with the patient seeing his
records.
Grohol: If we are going to talk
self-help, I think that patients should have their own
information.
Renner: If patients can have
access at low cost, I think that would be marvelous with
regard to the quality of care.
Audience: Another issue is that
there are physicians who are over- and under-diagnosing.
They do this to get their patient covered. I believe that
this is illegal. And it is these records that are being
used to provide information.
Simmons: This has been great
fun, and I enjoyed it very much.

Ferguson: This continues with
the final wrap-up group. Simmons is going to go first by
presenting what her group discussed.
Simmons: When you talk about
misinformation, what qualifies as such gets to be very
hard to understand. Tell them how you managed your own
and how people send you certain messages. I do some
centralized computing. I have removed people from my
list. I have a very low threshold for sick humor. Every
now and then we will have advocates who come on and are
mean and want to know why we will not give them any
information.
Audience: In our group we talked
about community leaders and what we do with them once we
get them. We have to make sure they know who to contact.
Once we do have the community leaders, we must consider
training -- whether they are professionals. Monitoring is
very important. Ownership is very important, and we
talked about the people who needed to have ownership.
Ferguson: I would like to wrap
up with a few concluding observations. These are the
things that occurred to me today. There are some bad
sides of the Internet, but on the whole, the self-help
community helps others. People often say that one of the
things that they like about this means of support is that
it is available 24 hours. Another really strong
impression that I got about the establishment and
maintenance of web sites was that there is a significant
degree of quality and attentiveness upheld to create
consistency. Looking into the future, I think that one
thing that is going to give us a real jump is the buddy
list. I find that to be an amazing dimension. And it is
worth visiting America Online. These systems are mainly
to deal with crises and to communicate with other people.
I think what we need to talk more about is professional
existence. I think that is a paradox that we are going to
have to do something about.
I had a very interesting discussion
with one of Linda Adler's clients at Kaiser. Kaiser is
looking at a major revision of primary adult medicine. In
their new job description they are told that they need to
spend more of their time doing desktop medicine.
I want to thank you all very much for
coming.

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