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Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 4:426-435 (1997)
© 1997 American Medical Informatics Association


Research Paper

Quality-of-Life Research on the Internet

Feasibility and Potential Biases in Patients with Ulcerative Colitis

Roy M. Soetikno, MD, Ramzi Mrad, Victoria Pao and Leslie A. Lenert, MD

Affiliation of the authors: Divisions of Clinical Pharmacology and Gastroenterology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA.

Correspondence and reprints: Leslie A Lenert, MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine, MSOB, Room X-208, Stanford, CA 94305. E-mail: lenert{at}stanford.edu

Abstract Objective: The World Wide Web (WWW) is a new communications medium that permits investigators to contact patients in nonmedical settings and study the effects of disease on quality of life through self-administered questionnaires. However, little is known about the feasibility and, what is more important, the validity of this approach. An on-line survey for patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) and patients whose UC had been treated with surgical procedures was developed. To understand how patients on the WWW might differ from those in practice and the potential biases in conducting epidemiological research in volunteers recruited on the Internet, post-surgery patients who responded to the WWW survey were compared with those in a surgical practice.

Setting: The Internet and private practice surgical clinic.

Main outcomes: Scores from the Short form 36 (SF-36) Health Assessment Questionnaire and the Self-Administered Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (IBDQ).

Results: Over a 5-month period, 53 post-surgery patients enrolled in the Internet study; 47 patients from a surgical clinic completed the same computer-based questionnaire. Surgically treated patients on the WWW were younger than their clinic counterparts (median age category 35-44 years vs. 45-54 years, p = 0.01) but more ill with a lower summary IBDQ score (168 vs. 186, p = 0.019) and lower health status across almost all dimensions of the SF-36 (p = 0.016).

Conclusions: It is feasible to conduct epidemiological research on the effects of UC on quality of life on the Web; however, systematic differences in disease activity between volunteer patients on the WWW and "in the clinic" may limit the applicability of results.




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