particularly chronic diseases such as diabetes, and
escalating health care costs. Our society is becoming
more diverse in every conceivable way, and
diversity is often, though not always, associated with
health disparities, (Institute of Medicine, US, 2002).
One of the ways through which healthcare givers
and governments have devised to inform people
about health issues is through the platform of the
new media which have been known to have
potentialities like speed, space, ubiquity and
seamlessness.
The term ‘new media’ as passed mostly un-
interrogated as most scholars have accepted it as a
term used to describe a body of media technologies
different from the traditional ones. We live in an
increasingly inter-networked society powered by
countless technological innovations; the new media
for one. The new media, particularly the internet, are
pervasive, (Green, 2010). With the help of recent
technological advancements and applications
development, the new media have overcome the
challenges inherent in the traditional media such as
strict controls and gate-keeping as the new media
offer a discursive platform popularly referred to as a
public sphere.
Green (2010) posits that once information is
digitized, it can be handled in consistent and
effective ways which allow a blurring of functions
and the emergence of hybrid technologies.
According to her, “increasingly, new media
technologies can perform more functions in more
varied contexts; such as accessing the internet from
a mobile phone...” These potentials therefore,
underscore the
usefulness of the new media to
sensitive sectors like the health sector and explain
further why healthcare givers and governments have
adopted these platforms of the new media to reach
out to health information consumers.
3 THE INTERNET AND HEALTH
INFORMATION: THE
CONCEPT OF E-HEALTH
As explained above, the many potentials of the
internet have prompted healthcare givers and nations
to adopt the internet as a channel for communicating
health messages to people who are increasingly in
search for health information. This concept has been
variously referred to as e-health, electronic health or
internet health.
According to Eysenbach (2001), e-health as an
emerging field is the intersection of medical
informatics, public health and business, mostly
referring to health services and information
delivered or enhanced through the internet and
related technologies. Eysenbach believes that in a
way, e- health encompasses a way of thinking and
commitment for networked, global thinking to
improve healthcare locally, regionally, and globally
through the use of technologically empowered
platforms like the internet. Eysenbach made some
valuable assumptions about the broad application of
e-health to include:
Efficiency - One of the promises of e-health is
to increase efficiency in health care, thereby
decreasing costs.
Enhancing quality of care - Increasing
efficiency involves not only reducing costs, but
at the same time improving quality.
Evidence based - E-health interventions
should be evidence-based in a sense that their
effectiveness and efficiency should not be
assumed but proven by rigorous scientific
evaluation. Accordingly, much work still has to
be done in this area.
Empowerment of consumers and patients - By
making the knowledge bases of medicine and
personal electronic records accessible to
consumers over the Internet, e-health opens
new avenues for patient-centered medicine, and
enables evidence-based patient choice.
Encouragement of a new relationship between
the patient and health professional, towards a
true partnership.
Education of physicians through online
sources (continuing medical education) and
consumers (health education tailored
preventive information for consumers)
Enabling information exchange and
communication in a standardized way between
healthcare establishments.
Extending the scope of healthcare beyond its
conventional boundaries. E-health enables
consumers to easily obtain health services
online from global providers.
Ethics - E-health involves new forms of
patient-physician interaction and poses new
challenges and threats to ethical issues such as
online professional practice, informed consent,
privacy and equity issues.
Equity - to make healthcare more equitable is
one of the promises of e-health, but at the same
time there is a considerable threat that e-health
may deepen the gap between the "haves" and
"have-nots". People, who do not have the
money, skills, and access to computers and
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