
HULL, Mass., Dec. 4, 2008
Social Networking For Medical Patients
CBS Evening News: Patients Joining Forces Online To Find New Treatments
-
Play CBS Video Video Networking For A Cure One woman has taken her crusade against ALS to the Web, creating a social networking site in the hopes of finding a cure. Dr. Sanjay Gupta has more.
-
(CBS)
-
Interactive HealthWatch Explore health issues including AIDS, cancer and antibiotics.
-
Quiz Medical Exam Give your brain a checkup with these health quizzes.
But 10 months ago, she was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, an incurable neurological disorder that destroys the body - but leaves the brain untouched. With the moral support of her friend Sue McGovern, she agreed to talk to CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta, a CBS News contributor.
"I was devastated: Devastated that I had it and devastated that there was no treatment for it," Engedahl said.
Now she has a page on a social networking site. But she's not keeping up with friends; she's trying to find a treatment for ALS on a Web site called Patients Like Me.
Conventional wisdom says that doctors and health care professionals know disease best. But patients like Sheila Engedahl know what its like to live with a devastating illness. And they're not only sharing their experiences but also driving research into new treatments.
"When they come home from the doctor, they might have answered their medical questions well. But the meaning and its impact on their life and what to do and the issues are not answered - and they come seeking those answers," said James Heywood, who with his brother Benjamin founded Patients Like Me.Read more from our partner in reporting this story, BusinessWeek.
Their idea was to take the medical records of ALS patients like Engedahl, as well as other diseases, and make the information available to anyone else on the site. The goal of this experiment in real time? Revolutionize the way patients get their information.
"The first thing you get is how you're doing relative to the rest of the world, is my disease progressing fast or slow?" Ben Heywood said. "What treatments am I on relative to other patients? Am I taking it at a dose higher or lower to other patients? And that's information a patient really can't get anywhere else and immediately they find out where they stand in the world."
Last year a small study found that 16 ALS patients benefited by using the drug Lithium. Once word got out to the 2,800 people in the ALS community on the Web site, patients started trying it.Second Opinion: Medicine Online Read part I |
Part II
A conventional clinical trial that might take years to organize was up and running in a matter of days.
The Heywood brothers know from personal experience. Their brother, Stephen, was diagnosed with ALS at age 29. The research those two MIT-trained engineers launched to try and save his life was the subject of a documentary film and led to the creation of the Web site. Stephen died two years ago, but his Web page is still active and patients are still able to learn from him.
"The collective wisdom of hundreds of thousands of patients really is smarter than any one person, no matter how well researched you are," Heywood said.
Even as she feels herself weakening, Engedahl hopes the power of shared experiences will speed the pace of research.
And she thinks something will come about to help her in her lifetime.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- DISCRIMINATION AGAINST MEDICARE PATIENTS IS WIDESPREAD.EG: BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER DALLAS,TX ANESTHESIOLOGISTS REFUSE CARE TO MEDICARE PATIENTS DUE TO POOR REIMBURSEMENT.THE MEDICARE PATIENTS ARE ASSIGNED TO LESS EDUCATED,LESS SKILLED,LESS EXPERIENCED NURSES(CRNA''S). THIS IS VERY DANGEROUS FOR THE HIGH RISK MEDICARE PATIENTS. DO OTHER HOSPITALS ENDORSE THIS PRACTICE?
- Reply to this comment
- As a stroke survivor, I have found that doctors know nothing about stroke rehabilitation. Only stroke forums on the net seem to have good information and that comes from stroke patients doing their own research. Even the national stroke organizations don''t seem to serve survivors, they have lost their mission
- Reply to this comment
- Being a stroke survivor I have found that no doctors have any knowledge of stroke rehabilitation, all the patients are basically on their own, The networking forums are the only place to get information. Even the national stroke organizations are not there for stroke survovors. They seem to have lost their mission.
- Reply to this comment
- As a member of "PATIENTS LIKE ME" (PLM), I''ve found the intersction between patients most helpful, and at times, extremely courageous!
I have had Psrkinson''s Ddisease (PD)for 32+ years, and based on what I''ve been through during that time, I like to use what I''ve been through to help and encourage those who have been recently diagnosed ... to let them know that a diagnosis of PD is not the end of the world.
Forums like PLM provide the "vehicle" for me to accomplish that goal!
Jim Evridge "AKA:SILVERFOXX_FIGHTING_BACK"
Pennssville, NJ
I can be reached at: silfoxx2002@yahoo.com - Reply to this comment
- I would advise anyone diagnosed with this sort of condition to investigate carbon monoxide in their environment, and the possibility of Celiac Disease. -- Those two things mimic MANY other conditions, and are far more common than thought. Check furnaces, clean filters, and try eating without wheat for a month. -- You could cure yourself.
- Reply to this comment
- By joining the site, you decide what information that your going to post. This information is from the patient''s themselves, and is not violating any Hippa Laws. It would be like you signing the paper at the doctors office and allowing your brother to be allowed your information, but not your sister. You choose what information you wish to post and may change it at anytime. lknott member PLM
- Reply to this comment
- By joining the site, you decide what information that your going to post. This information is from the patient''s themselves, and is not violating any Hippa Laws. It would be like you signing the paper at the doctors office and allowing your brother to be allowed your information, but not your sister. You choose what information you wish to post and may change it at anytime. lknott member PLM
- Reply to this comment
- By joining the site, you decide what information that your going to post. This information is from the patient''s themselves, and is not violating any Hippa Laws. It would be like you signing the paper at the doctors office and allowing your brother to be allowed your information, but not your sister. You choose what information you wish to post and may change it at anytime. lknott member PLM
- Reply to this comment
- By joining the site, you decide what information that your going to post. This information is from the patient''s themselves, and is not violating any Hippa Laws. It would be like you signing the paper at the doctors office and allowing your brother to be allowed your information, but not your sister. You choose what information you wish to post and may change it at anytime. lknott member PLM
- Reply to this comment
- By joining the site, you decide what information that your going to post. This information is from the patient''s themselves, and is not violating any Hippa Laws. It would be like you signing the paper at the doctors office and allowing your brother to be allowed your information, but not your sister. You choose what information you wish to post and may change it at anytime. lknott member PLM
- Reply to this comment
- How does this web site post all of these medical records without violating Hippa laws?
- Reply to this comment
Read more from our partner in reporting this story, BusinessWeek.
The road ahead in Afghanistan, and the crucial decision Obama faces.



