Another article was recently published by Jessica Berthold on medical wikis, called Living in the brave new world of medical wikis.
Saturday, January 12, 2008
American College of Physicians Article on Medical Wikis
Thursday, January 3, 2008
Cleveland Plain Dealer Revisits AskDrWiki
It has been eight months since an article appeared on AskDrWiki appeared in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. I was interviewed by Brie Zeltner last month regarding our progress and a follow up story was published this week discussing how we have fared this year. We are very excited to see the progress that we have made in 2007 and hope that in 2008 we will continue to grow and become a leading source of free and credible medical information.
Sunday, December 23, 2007
Ask Dr Wiki Receives Not For Profit Status!
It has been close to a year since we started AskDrWiki.com. One of our initial objectives was to obtain 501(c)(3) status from the IRS. After filling out what seems like thousands of forms we received our letter from the IRS this week approving us as a non profit company. I hope that this will help increase collaboration and contributions by removing the perception of a financial interest and allow us to continue on our mission of creating a free online source of up to date medical information.
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Another Lesson Physicians Can Learn from their Kindergarden Teachers
Free Online Wiki could Save Schools Billions
An article in the USA Today by Greg Toppo, describes how Free-Reading.net, a wiki reading program for kindergartners and first graders may make big, bulky - and expensive - textbooks go the way of the film strip. The wiki which allows teachers to post their own lessons, comments and modifications has been approved by a textbook adoption committee in Florida and is awaiting approval by the state’s incoming education commissioner.
Since Florida is one of the five textbook markets in the USA, its move could lead to the development of other free materials that might someday challenge the dominance of a handful of big education publishers. Schools spend $4.4 billion for textbooks in the 2006-2007 school year, so the prospect of free state approved materials could have profound influence on how schools spend money.
Can healthcare providers learn a lesson from our Kindergarden teachers using Free-Reading? We hope so! If the medical information that is published on a medical wiki is free and high quality it will be hard to ignore.
Monday, September 17, 2007
The Cost of Medical Information....Priceless
Cost of 5 new textbooks............................................ $750
Cost of First Year Subscription to Up to Date....... $495
Having all of your Medical Information Stored on a Medical Wiki for Free.....PRICELESS
Medical textbooks and subscription based medical websites, such as Up To Date consume an enormous amount of dollars from physicians, nurses and medical students yearly. I recently purchased several textbooks with a average purchase price of $155 per text book and it is not unusual to find some medical textbooks to be priced in the $200- 300 range. Since my medical training started I have noticed a creep in the cost of textbooks which are likely due to more graphics, color photos, and bundling of books with a CD-ROM, but should we expect medical students, nurses, and residents to continue to pay these prices on little to no salary?
For the residents and students who have a library who will pay the cost of a site license for subscription based site, such as Up to Date, they are a great source of information. For users who work in smaller hospitals or clinics the price of $495 for an individual subscription to these services can be prohibitive.
A wiki, on the other hand with 500 GB of storage cost less than $100 a year. This amount of storage would equal 51 million pages in a medical text book. That is a lot of information and could be a potential huge savings for medical professionals.
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Are Physicians Starting To Wiki a Diagnosis?
The BMJ article on Googling for a diagnosis published last year brought attention to the use of the internet to help make the correct diagnosis. We have also noticed a trend that we have seen on AskDrWiki, which is use of the word "wiki" that accompanies a medical search query. We have had over 1400 queries this year in which a medical term was linked with the word wiki.
Such as "cardiac index wiki", "empiric trial wiki", "amyloidosis wiki", or "captopril wiki". Clearly medical students, nurses, and physicians are not only Googling for a diagnosis but they are also directing their search toward a wiki.
We hope that we can help make another tool for the physicians bag that can help diagnose difficult cases.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
AskDrWiki and RadsWiki Collaborate
We are very excited about our new collaboration with Radswiki. One of the most powerful features of a wiki comes from the ability to wiki link to other articles in the wiki. With the growing list of medical wikis this benefit may be lost. We hope that we can continue to collaborate with other wikis and build a true quality multi specialty medical wiki. We recognize the need for subspecialty wikis, like Radswiki, just as there are subspecialty text books, but we hope that other subspecialty wikis will also work with us to establish an integrated medical wiki.