Catherine Arnott Smith
Assistant Professor
School of Information Studies
Syracuse University
“In Our Own
Words: What Consumers Can Teach Us
About Information Retrieval In Healthcare"
Thursday, January 6, 2005
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Room 404, IS Building
Abstract: The "consumer vocabulary problem" has been called a fundamental issue in health information provision. This is the problem of mismatch between terms used by healthcare professionals and those used by the consumers who receive their services.
One guiding assumption in this research domain is that
consumers have their own "language" susceptible to analysis. However, as Lewis et
al. have cautioned: "To presume that [consumer language] contains a
knowable, stable vocabulary and grammar similar in structure to that of
the formal languages of health care imposes a professional structure on
a very personal experience." Any study of consumer "language" will
beg the question of what terms consumers actually use. Two significant
challenges to consumer terminologists are the definition and the capture
of terms that accurately reflect consumer reality.
In this presentation I will report on my findings in
an exploratory study of consumer e-mails to the Cancer
Information Service at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute. I will place this study within my larger research
agenda: to understand the impact of medical terminology
upon consumer access to medical records. |