The Role of Domain Expertise in Smart, User-Sensitive, Health Information Portals

The provision of consumer health information portals acting as gateways to online resources is one strategy for enabling patients to be better informed and engaged in healthcare decision making and support. These portals need to be both smart and user sensitive, able to identify and select resources of relevance to a user community, describe them in ways that facilitate user assessments of quality and relevance, and provide efficient and effective search functionality that can be tailored to individual information needs. The domain expertise required to select and describe resources in this manner is a key to the efficacy of such portals, with their viability dependent on the sustainability and scalability of their resource identification, selection and description processes. This paper reports on a study of the domain expertise involved with the provision of an information portal for a breast cancer community undertaken as part of the Smart Information Portal Project.

[1]  Sue McKemmish,et al.  Breast cancer knowledge online: towards meeting the diverse information needs of the breast cancer community , 2002 .

[2]  Susannah Fox Finding Answers Online in Sickness and in Health , 2006 .

[3]  Anne Morris,et al.  The problem of information overload in business organisations: a review of the literature , 2000, Int. J. Inf. Manag..

[4]  Jane Greenberg,et al.  Usability of a metadata creation application for resource authors , 2005 .

[5]  Jane Greenberg,et al.  Metadata Extraction and Harvesting , 2004 .

[6]  Judith L Bader,et al.  Evaluation of New Multimedia Formats for Cancer Communications , 2003, Journal of medical Internet research.

[7]  G. Frydman,et al.  The first generation of e-patients , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[8]  James D. Anderson,et al.  The nature of indexing: how humans and machines analyze messages and texts for retrieval - Part II: Machine indexing, and the allocation of human versus machine effort , 2001, Inf. Process. Manag..

[9]  Julie Fisher,et al.  A Role for Information Portals as Intelligent Decision Support Systems: Breast Cancer Knowledge Online Experience , 2006 .

[10]  David Bomba,et al.  Evaluating the Quality of Health Web Sites: Developing a Validation Method and Rating Instrument , 2005, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[11]  Christian Köhler,et al.  How do consumers search for and appraise health information on the world wide web? Qualitative study using focus groups, usability tests, and in-depth interviews , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[12]  S. Ziebland,et al.  How the internet affects patients' experience of cancer: a qualitative study , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[13]  Julie Fisher,et al.  User Centred Quality Health Information Provision: Benefits and Challenges , 2005, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[14]  Nahyun Kwon,et al.  Predictors of cancer information overload: findings from a national survey , 2007, Inf. Res..

[15]  Gordon W. Paynter,et al.  Developing practical automatic metadata assignment and evaluation tools for internet resources , 2005, Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL '05).

[16]  Munindar P. Singh,et al.  Service-Oriented Computing: Semantics, Processes, Agents , 2010 .