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Visible Human Server: Discover Your Body March 11, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Anatomy, e-Science, Health 2.0, Medicine, Medicine 2.0, science, Visualization, Web 2.0.
3 comments

David Rothman informed us about the Visible Human Server where you can discover the human body slice by slice. It’s much better to study anatomy with this tool.

visible-human-server

Further reading:

Personalized Medicine Summit: March 19 Webcast March 11, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Personalized medicine, Web 2.0, Webinar.
2 comments

A free online webcast summit on “Personalized Medicine,” will be held on the 19th of March and hosted by BrightTALK™. It will include 6 presentations from leading personalized medicine experts on topics including:

  • Michael Amos, National Institute for Standards and Technology Measurement – “Measurement Technology Challenges for Personalized Medicine”
  • Peter Keeling, CEO, Diaceutics – “Designing Return on Investment into Personalized Medicine”
  • Mondher Toumi, Chief Scientific Officer, Creativ-Ceutical – “The Impacts of Personalized Medicine: Pricing and Market Access”
  • Brandon M. Welch, President & CEO, SGenomics – “The Need of Clinical Decision Support in Personalized Medicine”

You can review the agenda and register for the Personalized Medicine summit at here.

brighttalk

Webicina Poll: Which Web 2.0 Guidance Package Next? March 9, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in e-patient, Health, Health 2.0, Medicine, Medicine 2.0, Web 2.0, Webicina.
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2 comments

Webicina.com is my service that aims to help medical professionals and patients enter the web 2.0 era by providing them with e-courses, consulting and personalized packages.

A few days ago, we released the first free medical web 2.0 guidance package focusing on diabetes. As this is meant to be a collaborative effort where we are totally open to your suggestions, we would like to ask you to decide which medical condition to focus on next.

Further reading:

Navigenics: What my genome tells me to do March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Biotechnology, DNA, e-patient, eHealth, Genetic testing, genetics, Genome, Health, Medicine, Personalized medicine, science, Web 2.0.
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20 comments

A few months ago, Navigenics.com offered me to analyze my saliva sample and genome. I happily accepted the offer and was curious to see what they could tell me. After graduating from medical school, I will start PhD training in personalized genetics this September so I’m quite into this emerging field of medicine.

navigenics-main-page2

I sent my saliva sample back to their laboratory this January and received the results in about 3-4 weeks.

navigenics-view-my-results1

I clicked on View my results and saw what kind of risks I have for certain medical conditions such as glaucoma, heart disease, prostate cancer, Crohn’s disease or osteoarthritis (9 conditions all together).

When I check one medical condition, I see something like that:

navigenics-results1

They tell me my risk compared to the whole population.

navigenics-risk

And how that medical condition is affected by environmental and genetic factors.

navigenics-all-risk

And if I’m interested in the particular single nucleotide polymorphism they analyzed, I can check the details.

navigenics-ratio

Pros:

  • The information this service provided me with was useful and I will change some things in my lifestyle.
  • I can talk with a genetic counselor to discuss the results of my genetic variations.
  • I can print the results and share it with my doctor through an understandable report that mentions the references on which they based my risk percentages.
  • They help me what I can do in order to lower my risks for specific conditions. They also let me know things that prevent multiple conditions on the Navigenics panels.
  • Each condition is covered in details (causes, symptoms, treatments, etc.). This information is powered by Mayo Clinic.
  • I can find support groups or more information on prevention.

Cons:

  • Let’s say 3 SNPs tell me I have elevated risk for heart disease. But next year, they will discover 4 new ones that defend me from this condition. So Navigenics, just like any other similar companies, can only tell me risk percentages that might change a lot in the future.
  • For example, if based on my genomic results, I have elevated risk for heart disease, what I can do to lower this risk? Exercises, healthy lifestyle, etc. Things you can tell me without analyzing my genome. Though it’s not the fault of the service, but of the state genetics is in at the moment.
  • It’s still way too expensive compared to what I get for my money as the results cannot really be used for medical decisions  (I got a free package so I know I shouldn’t say that).
  • Well, a few genetic tests can be useful when making medical decisions, but such tests should be ordered only by medical professionals. Or if not, at least genetic counseling should be for free as patients need serious guidance when reading the results of their genomic variations. (Update: Navigenics provides free genetic counseling for all Health Compass members and 1 hour of free counseling for all Insight members. And you can order the tests through a medical professional or on your own.)
  • I think I can handle many things but it was almost impossible for me to understand which documents I have to send back to the lab with my saliva sample. A step-by-step video tutorial would be useful.

I’m thankful to the Team of Navigenics.com for showing me how their service works in action. I’m impressed and looking forward to seeing how they can make their service even better.

Scienceroll.com: Weekly Introduction March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Blogging, Health, Health 2.0, Medicine, Medicine 2.0, Web 2.0.
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I would like to share my favourite and ongoing projects with you so I can give you a proper introduction to Scienceroll.com. You can also find me on Twitter or on Friendfeed.

Medicine 2.0 University Course: This is the second semester of the first university course that focuses on web 2.0 and medicine for medical students. Last semester, almost 50 students attended the 20 slideshows through 10 weeks and they filled a survey out before and after the course. I launched the second semester for English-speaking students (February – May, 2009). I’m open to launch the same course in Second Life.

Medicine20 Course 4 by you.

Medicine 2.0 Collection: I maintain the biggest collection of links and posts focusing on web 2.0 and medicine.

Webicina.com is my service that aims to help medical professionals and patients enter the web 2.0 era by providing them with e-courses, consulting and personalized packages.

PeRSSonalized Medicine is a free tool that lets you select your favourite resources and read the latest news and articles in one personalized place. You can create your own “medical journal” and as we are totally open to suggestions, let us add the journals, blogs and websites that you would like to follow.

Webicina.Com

Diabetes 2.0 Package: If you would like to know which web 2.0 tools can provide support or reliable health information, which communities to join and which quality blogs to read, this personalized package is made for you.

Webicina.Com

Scienceroll Search is a personalized medical search engine powered by PolyMeta search and clustering engine. You can choose which databases to search in and which one to exclude from your list. It works with well-known medical search engines and databases and we’re totally open to add new ones or remove those you don’t really like.

scienceroll-search

Medicine 2.0 Blog Carnival and Microvarnival: The blog carnival focusing on web 2.0 and medicine. Let me know if you have a submission or if you want to host an edition.

medicine20.jpg

Gene Genie is the blog carnival of genes, personalized genomics and gene-related diseases. Our plan is to cover the whole genome before 2082 (it means 14-15 genes every two weeks). Let me know if you have a submission or if you want to host an edition.

gene_genie_logo_400.jpg

List of biomedical and scientific community sites: More than 30 communities with links, descriptions and screenshots.

List of Biomedical video sites: Almost 40 sites featuring scientific or medical videos and videocasts.

Doctors using Electronic Medical Record: Video March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in e-patient, eHealth, Electronic Medical Records, Health, Health 2.0, Healthcare, Medicine, Medicine 2.0, Personal Health Record, Video, Web 2.0.
1 comment so far

I do clinical rotation now before graduating in August so I can see how healthcare works at least in Hungary from inside. I see how much administrative work a doctor must do day by day. And even if the switch might be painful, we need to use electronic medical records.

Anyway I think e-patients will use personal health records sooner than doctors start using EMRs.

(Via WSJ Health)

GuidedMed: Find health information by selecting symptoms March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in eHealth, Health, Health 2.0, Medical Search, Medicine, Medicine 2.0, Video, Web 2.0.
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1 comment so far

A few days ago, I linked to a really comprehensive review of the online medical symptom checkers. Now here is GuidedMed that helps you find health information by selecting symptoms and answering questions.

VuMedi: A surgeon-only video sharing website March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Medicine, Medicine 2.0, Surgery, Video, Web 2.0.
6 comments

VuMedi is the 29th addition to my extended list of medical/scientific video sites. VuMedi is a surgeon-only video sharing website where you can view, upload, and discuss surgical videos.

vumedi

Please let me know if you know more similar sites.

Daily Fun: Biochemical Puzzles March 7, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Biology, Biotechnology, Fun, science, Sciencefun.
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4 comments

Just a short post about a blog where you can find biochemical puzzles and quizzes. Let’s start with an amino acid crossword.

amino-acid-crossword

Further reading:

FDA Application Approvals 2000-2008 on ManyEyes March 1, 2009

Posted by Dr. Bertalan Meskó in Visualization, Web 2.0.
2 comments

Attila Csordás at PIMM blog notified us about this great visualization on ManyEyes.

manyeyes-fda-visualization

If we didn’t have to make our data public on ManyEyes, it would be the biggest and most useful tool in visualization of all time…

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