Lehmann Eldon D
Academic Department of Radiology, St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and Department of Imaging (MRU), Imperial College of Science Technology & Medicine, NHLI Royal Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Diabetes Technol Ther. 2003;5(3):477-90. doi: 10.1089/152091503765692027.
AIDA is a diabetes-computing program freely available at www.2aida.org on the Web. The software is intended to serve as an educational support tool and can be used by anyone who has an interest in diabetes, whether they be patients, relatives, health-care professionals, or students. In previous "Diabetes Information Technology & WebWatch" columns various indicators of usage of the AIDA program have been reviewed, and various comments from users of the software have been documented. The purpose of this column is to overview a proof-of-concept semi-automated analysis about why people are downloading the latest version of the AIDA educational diabetes program. AIDA permits the interactive simulation of plasma insulin and blood glucose profiles for teaching, demonstration, self-learning, and research purposes. It has been made freely available, without charge, on the Internet as a noncommercial contribution to continuing diabetes education. Since its launch in 1996 over 300,000 visits have been logged at the main AIDA Website-www.2aida.org-and over 60,000 copies of the AIDA program have been downloaded free-of-charge. This column documents the results of a semi-automated analysis of comments left by Website visitors while they were downloading the AIDA software, before they had a chance to use the program. The Internet-based survey methodology and semi-automated analysis were both found to be robust and reliable. Over a 5-month period (from October 3, 2001 to February 28, 2002) 400 responses were received. During the corresponding period 1,770 actual visits were made to the Website survey page-giving a response rate to this proof-of-concept study of 22.6%. Responses were received from participants in over 54 countries-with nearly half of these (n = 194; 48.5%) originating from the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada; 208 responses (52.0%) were received from patients with diabetes, 50 (12.5%) from doctors, 49 (12.3%) from relatives of patients, with fewer responses from students, diabetes educators, nurses, pharmacists, and other end users. The semi-automated analysis adopted for this study has re-affirmed the feasibility of using the Internet to obtain free-text comments, at no real cost, from a substantial number of medical software downloaders/users. The survey has also offered some insight into why members of the public continue to turn to the Internet for medical information. Furthermore it has provided useful information about why people are actually downloading the AIDA v4.3a interactive educational "virtual diabetes patient" simulator.
AIDA是一款糖尿病计算程序,可在网站www.2aida.org上免费获取。该软件旨在作为一种教育支持工具,任何对糖尿病感兴趣的人都可以使用,无论他们是患者、亲属、医疗保健专业人员还是学生。在之前的“糖尿病信息技术与网络观察”专栏中,已经回顾了AIDA程序的各种使用指标,并记录了该软件用户的各种评论。本专栏的目的是概述一项概念验证的半自动分析,内容是关于人们为何下载最新版AIDA糖尿病教育程序。AIDA允许为教学、演示、自学和研究目的交互式模拟血浆胰岛素和血糖曲线。它已在互联网上免费提供,作为对持续糖尿病教育的非商业贡献。自1996年推出以来,AIDA的主要网站www.2aida.org的访问量已超过30万次,AIDA程序的免费下载量已超过6万份。本专栏记录了对网站访问者在下载AIDA软件时(在他们有机会使用该程序之前)留下的评论进行半自动分析的结果。基于互联网的调查方法和半自动分析都被证明是稳健且可靠的。在5个月的时间里(从2001年10月3日至2002年2月28日),共收到400份回复。在同一时期,网站调查页面的实际访问量为1770次,本次概念验证研究的回复率为22.6%。收到了来自54多个国家的参与者的回复,其中近一半(n = 194;48.5%)来自美国、英国和加拿大;208份回复(52.0%)来自糖尿病患者,50份(12.5%)来自医生,49份(12.3%)来自患者亲属,学生、糖尿病教育工作者、护士、药剂师和其他最终用户的回复较少。本研究采用的半自动分析再次证实了利用互联网以几乎零成本从大量医疗软件下载者/用户那里获取自由文本评论的可行性。该调查还提供了一些关于公众为何继续转向互联网获取医疗信息的见解。此外,它还提供了关于人们实际下载AIDA v4.3a交互式教育“虚拟糖尿病患者”模拟器原因的有用信息。