My parents are doctors, my mom is an ob-gyne and my dad’s a urologist, add to this my aunt and uncles who are either doctors, nurses , medical technologist; going into engineering field meant somewhat alienating myself to a lot of people. But the strange circumstance of my environment also gave me somewhat of an advantage during medical emergencies, I usually keep my head because when I was a child my mom and dad always seem to be the most level headed people around whenever a medical emergency is occurring; this also meant I usually self medicate and during the few times I go to a doctor who I do not personally know, I can usually second guess what he/she is going to do and to prescribe for my symptoms ( the truth is the only reason I go to doctors is to get medical certificates whenever I am absent for classes ).
But most people don’t have the same background and when someone you care about is in trauma or shock or in conditions like asthma and/or allergy attack people need and it is right for us to expect that the web has something of a resource for us to consult with.
Another benefit of this is that we make it easy for medical professionals from poor countries such as the Philippines to be exposed to new medical treatments, clinical techniques etc. Two weeks ago we were having dinner after my mom attended a post-graduate seminar on her specialization, my dad asked her what the topics were and my mom told here new studies, and I asked her what kind of studies were presented , she said mostly they discuss studies done in other countries mostly from US UK Germany France Canada (Industrialized Nations), I just went 3 days in 6 hours of sleep so I was a little slow that night and had to ask why are there no studies made here? My dad said something to the effect of some but effectively none.
Harvard Medical School To Help Build Wikipedia for Medicine
Brainchild of Silicon Valley entrepreneur, Medpedia will feature content written by experts and scholarsPublished On Friday, August 08, 2008 1:45 PM
ARTICLE TOOLS:It started with late nights, four crying kids, and a worried father.
James P. Currier, founder and chairman of Medpedia—what aims to become the world’s largest collaborative online encyclopedia of medicine and health—recalls scouring the Web for medical information while comforting a sick child or two. Even for a tech-savvy entrepreneur in Silicon Valley, readily-accessible, credible information was not easy to find online.
“I felt as if medical information on the Web was more underdeveloped than other areas I was used to spending time on the Web with,” Currier said. “I’ve been building Web sites for years, and I felt that there needed to be an upgrade on what was available.”
The Medpedia Project, which Currier aims to launch by the end of the year, is a global effort modeled after Wikipedia, to build a comprehensive medical resource that will be readily accessible and understandable to both health professionals and patients.
In addition to the encyclopedic “wiki” component of Medpedia—which will be edited by approved contributors selected through an internal review process—the online Web site will serve as a professional network for the medical community and a platform for patient groups.
“In the big picture, it’s an attempt to engage the health and medical communities with Web technology, something that is only beginning today,” said Currier, who graduated from Harvard Business School in 1999 and has partnered with scholars at Harvard to launch Medpedia.
Though the free public site will be launched by year end, a preview site is already available.
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