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Providing information for patients is currently a growth industry. Traditionally, health professionals have created their own fact sheets for local use, with consumer organisations, self help groups, and commercial publishers plugging the gaps. But now commercial companies are competing to relieve providers of services of their responsibilities by selling computer disks containing information about hundreds of conditions and procedures. This format allows purchasers to customise this information for their patients.1
Commercially produced videos on diseases and treatments that permit viewers to experience passively what they may encounter are also becoming available. Interactive video disks take this medium one stage further by inviting patients themselves to exert some control over the flow of information. Whether patients will be willing to make decisions about treatment on the basis of interaction with a machine rather than a doctor is not yet known. Given
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