The emergent discipline of health web science. Luciano, J., S., Cumming, G., P., Wilkinson, M., D., & Kahana, E. Journal of medical Internet research, 15(8):e166, 1, 2013.
The emergent discipline of health web science. [link]Website  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The transformative power of the Internet on all aspects of daily life, including health care, has been widely recognized both in the scientific literature and in public discourse. Viewed through the various lenses of diverse academic disciplines, these transformations reveal opportunities realized, the promise of future advances, and even potential problems created by the penetration of the World Wide Web for both individuals and for society at large. Discussions about the clinical and health research implications of the widespread adoption of information technologies, including the Internet, have been subsumed under the disciplinary label of Medicine 2.0. More recently, however, multi-disciplinary research has emerged that is focused on the achievement and promise of the Web itself, as it relates to healthcare issues. In this paper, we explore and interrogate the contributions of the burgeoning field of Web Science in relation to health maintenance, health care, and health policy. From this, we introduce Health Web Science as a subdiscipline of Web Science, distinct from but overlapping with Medicine 2.0. This paper builds on the presentations and subsequent interdisciplinary dialogue that developed among Web-oriented investigators present at the 2012 Medicine 2.0 Conference in Boston, Massachusetts.
@article{
 title = {The emergent discipline of health web science.},
 type = {article},
 year = {2013},
 keywords = {Delivery of Health Care,Information Storage and Retrieval,Internet},
 pages = {e166},
 volume = {15},
 websites = {http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=3758025&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract},
 month = {1},
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 abstract = {The transformative power of the Internet on all aspects of daily life, including health care, has been widely recognized both in the scientific literature and in public discourse. Viewed through the various lenses of diverse academic disciplines, these transformations reveal opportunities realized, the promise of future advances, and even potential problems created by the penetration of the World Wide Web for both individuals and for society at large. Discussions about the clinical and health research implications of the widespread adoption of information technologies, including the Internet, have been subsumed under the disciplinary label of Medicine 2.0. More recently, however, multi-disciplinary research has emerged that is focused on the achievement and promise of the Web itself, as it relates to healthcare issues. In this paper, we explore and interrogate the contributions of the burgeoning field of Web Science in relation to health maintenance, health care, and health policy. From this, we introduce Health Web Science as a subdiscipline of Web Science, distinct from but overlapping with Medicine 2.0. This paper builds on the presentations and subsequent interdisciplinary dialogue that developed among Web-oriented investigators present at the 2012 Medicine 2.0 Conference in Boston, Massachusetts.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Luciano, Joanne S and Cumming, Grant P and Wilkinson, Mark D and Kahana, Eva},
 doi = {10.2196/jmir.2499},
 journal = {Journal of medical Internet research},
 number = {8}
}

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