Design for network communities
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems
Online Communities: Designing Usability and Supporting Socialbilty
Online Communities: Designing Usability and Supporting Socialbilty
Lessons from a dozen years of group support systems research: a discussion of lab and field findings
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special issue: Information technology and its organizational impact
Control patterns in a healthcare network
dg.o '07 Proceedings of the 8th annual international conference on Digital government research: bridging disciplines & domains
Mobile virtual communities research: a synthesis of current trends and a look at future perspectives
International Journal of Web Based Communities
Mobile support for communities of interest: design and implementation of Community2Go
Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services
Self-supportive virtual communities
International Journal of Web Based Communities
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This article describes mobile virtual healthcare communities as a solution for meeting cancer patients' needs for information and interaction. After a short introduction into the German healthcare system and its potential starting points for virtual communities, the authors focus on cancer patients. They analyse their situation through field studies and identify information and interaction needs. On this basis, requirements for user centric socio-technical system design for cancer patients are derived. Since no existing offers meet these prerequisites, the authors work on piloting a mobile virtual community for cancer patients in Germany. Some of the identified user needs hint at an extension of web-based services for overcoming internet-related boundaries. New technological possibilities like mobile services and mobile devices are influencing virtual communities. Subjects like ubiquitous community access, new possibilities of user identification and location related services are of special interest since they might allow real "anytime-anyplace" access to the community platform. But regardless of the vast (theoretical) technical possibilities of new mobile technologies for extending web-based services, only socially accepted, technically stable and economically feasible solutions can ensure sustainable success of mobile virtual healthcare communities.