Lyme disease, science, and society: Camp Other

Monday, April 18, 2011

0 Research And A Personal Story: Computer scientist researches own Lyme disease

Well, this has been posted elsewhere, but I just had to share it here, too:

Computer scientist researched her own condition, Lyme disease

Source link: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11101/1138165-114.stm

Read the above article, and see if you see yourself (or someone you care about) in this woman's shoes. (I know that I can relate to her own search for reliable medical information, that's for sure.)

After much research from many different medical sources, Ms. Mankoff decided to try long-term antibiotics. After 18 months of antibiotic use she could stop treatment and go on to write professional papers, work full time, and do research on how members of the Lyme patient community seek out information on Lyme disease diagnosis, treatment, and support.

There is mention in the Post-Gazette article above that the paper based on her research of the Lyme patient community will be presented at an upcoming conference on computer-human interaction, CHI 2011.

That paper is:

J. Mankoff, K. Kuksenok, J. A. Rode, S. Kiesler & K. Waldman, Competing online viewpoints and models of chronic illness. In Proceedings of CHI 2011. To Appear (Full Paper)

And here is a link to the FULL TEXT (no subscription required):

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~assist/publications/11MankoffCHI.pdf

If anyone happens to be in the Vancouver area this May 6 and would like to attend the session, it will be from 4:00-5:20 pm. (A link to the conference appears at the bottom of this post.)

A description is as follows:

Session Chair: Julie Kientz (University of Washington)
Competing Online Viewpoints and Models of Chronic Illness - Paper

Session Chair: Julie Kientz (University of Washington)
Competing Online Viewpoints and Models of Chronic Illness - Paper
Jennifer Mankoff Carnegie Mellon University,
Kateryna Kuksenok University of Washington,
Sara Kiesler Carnegie Mellon,
Jennifer A. Rode Drexel University,
Kelly Waldman Duke

Abstract »

People with chronic health problems use online resources to understand and manage their condition, but many such resources can present competing and confusing viewpoints. We surveyed and interviewed with people experiencing prolonged symptoms after a Lyme disease diagnosis. We explore how competing viewpoints in online content affect participants’ understanding of their disease. Our results illustrate how chronically ill people search for information and support, and work to help others over time. Participant identity and beliefs about their illness evolved, and this led many to take on new roles, creating content and advising others who were sick. What we learned about online content creation suggests a need for designs that support this journey and engage with complex issues surrounding online health resources.


If you wish to attend CHI 2011 for only a day session on site, you must be warned that registration is steep:
http://chi2011.org/attending/registration.html

If you can't make it to Vancouver and pay for admission, consider sitting at home, reading the pdf of the paper above, and emailing Ms. Mankoff with comments and questions.

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