| Literature DB >> 15998616 |
Lakshmi M Grama1, Margaret Beckwith, Wayne Bittinger, Diana Blais, Cindy Lollar, Anne Middleswarth, Marianne Noone, Deborah Price, Sharon Quint-Kasner, Victoria Shields, Lawrence W Wright.
Abstract
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) was among the first federal agencies to recognize the potential of the Internet for disseminating health-related information. The evolution and refinement of NCI's online cancer information has been substantially "user driven"-from the launch of CancerNet in 1995 to the recent redesign of its award-winning successor, the NCI website. This article presents an overview of NCI's multi-pronged approach to gathering input about its online information products, including stakeholder meetings, focus groups, standard and customized online user surveys, usability testing, heuristic reviews, and search log analysis. Also highlighted are some of the many enhancements that have been made to NCI's online cancer information products based on user input.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15998616 PMCID: PMC1550662 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.7.3.e25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Milestones in the development of NCI's website
| 1995 | CancerNet website is launched. |
| 1999 | cancerTrials website is launched. |
| 1999 | CancerNet website is redesigned. |
| 2002 | NCI's overarching website [ |
| 2004 | NCI website is redesigned. |
Figure 1Before and after screen shots of the CancerNet home page, showing a shift in focus from audience to topic with the 1999 redesign
Type of information users were seeking on CancerNet (1999)
| 22.8 | Information on a specific type of cancer |
| 18.6 | Treatment information (general and specific) |
| 11.3 | Clinical trial information (specific trials, general information, trial results) |
| 8.1 | Symptoms of cancer, causes, risk factors, detection, diagnosis, prevention |
| 6.8 | Specific term (type of tumor or other term—not by name of cancer) |
| 4.7 | Cancer literature/articles |
| 4.5 | New treatments, news, recent findings, current research projects |
| 3.5 | Patient support (pain relief, diet/nutrition, survivorship, exercise, follow-up, questions to ask doctor) |
| 3.1 | Side effects |
| 2.9 | Statistics (incidence rates, survival rates, mortality rates) |
| 2.8 | Drug information |
| 2.8 | Access to other cancer resources (treatment facilities, physician names/specialties, national tumor registry, cost information, insurance coverage, patient support group) |
| 2.2 | Caregiver information (how to help patient, what to expect as disease progresses, how to talk to patient, etc) |
| 2.1 | History of cancer research, information for reports/projects |
| 1.8 | NCI publications (ordering information) |
| 0.8 | Alternative treatments |
| 0.6 | Genetic information (general and specific) |
| 0.4 | Search engine for the site |
| 0.3 | Information about oncology professions |
Figure 2The “Types of Cancer” page on CancerNet
Figure 3The “Breast Cancer” page on CancerNet, an example of a cancer-specific home page
Figure 4The home page of the current NCI website, prominently featuring “Types of Cancer” and links to “Common Cancer Types”
Figure 5The Clinical Trials portal home page on NCI's website (2002)
Figure 6The Clinical Trials portal home page on the 2004 redesigned NCI website
Selected improvements to the patient-oriented clinical trial abstracts
| Use of Language | Provide both simplified and health professional versions of the title. |
| Readability | Write sentences that are as short as the content will allow. |
| Content Display | Emphasize how users who are interested in participating in a clinical trial can seek further information. |