Will Google be our new God?

8

October

2019

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In the early days, when people had question about their life and things they did not know, they would turn to God. They asked him for forgiveness, for good health, how old they would become and what they should do. This was mostly a monologue, except maybe for everyone that claims that God speaks directly to them, from the sender to God. When their wishes and conversation was heard and they received good weather, they thanked God and worshipped him even harder.

Hundreds of years later, somebody, or something took his thrown. This new ‘God’ receives 63.000 questions per second (Aleksandra 2018), and 15% of all those inquiries are completely new (FaithTech 2019). I am talking about Google, our new digital God. The search enquiries are getter quicker, more accurate and even more personalized. Every search made into Google will train the algorithm in understanding you better as a person. Our darkest secrets, the questions we do not dare to ask anybody else, where do we go? For the stupidest questions, the questions where you would be put in jail for and the questions that are so embarrassing you wouldn’t even ask you best friend, we all turn to Google.

Someday in the future, a time will come where Google will understand us better than we understand ourselves and therefore people will trust him better than we trust ourselves or our friends. But what happens when we trust a machine more than we trust our own intuition. Do we get to live in a world of self-fulfilling prophecies, where people follow the words of Google? And if so, what is the task of Google in all this, should it stop personalizing and gathering data from our searches to make our lives more convenient? Or should it keep going and create a God of knowledge?

 

 

 

Aleksandra (2018). 63 Fascinating Google Search Statistics. Retrieved from: https://seotribunal.com/blog/google-stats-and-facts/

FaithTech (2019). Is Google the New God? Retrieved from: https://medium.com/faithtech/is-google-the-new-god-81f26b69bf8

Photo by: Kirk Giles, Daily Life 2018

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E-health: hype or revolution?

7

October

2016

5/5 (1)

In a couple years healthcare will change revolutionary. Big hospitals will disappear. At least, that is what the Dutch minister Edith Schippers and State Secretary Martin van Rijn claim. Apart from new medical complaints like ‘tablet-neck’, ‘iPad-wrist’, ‘WhatsApp-thumb’ and ‘selfie-elbow’, there is another development going on which is called e-health. E-health is explained as the use of technology to support or improve health and healthcare. As a consequence of e-health, patients will be able to control their health and there are more advantages.

 

Advantages

First of all, healthcare will be closer to patients as e-health provides solutions like an online patient portal where they can make appointments, see their research results and medical and medication information. They can also e-mail questions to their doctor or nurse. Secondly, e-health will reduce costs. This is as a result of the first advantage. Because of the quicker access to your medical information and easier contact with doctors, it will save a lot of time and visits to the hospital. Thirdly, it will be easier for patients to monitor their health themselves and therefore be more independent.

 

Drawbacks

E- health will stimulate the use of smartphones and other electronic devices, whereas this causes medical complaints as mentioned in the introduction. For this reason, it might be better to put smartphones away more often and just enjoy the ‘real’ world. Secondly, only 16% of the patients are using these new possibility of requesting their medicines online and solely 3% asks questions online according to the e-health Monitor 2016 of research institutions Nictiz and Nivel. So a lot of patients are not even able to find their ‘digital doctor’ and the ones that do find the new online possibilities say it’s not user friendly.

Furthermore, it will be dangerous for the health of patients if digital records are transferred in a bad way, like medication overviews which are not up to date. There is a serious problem here, because the computer systems are not connecting to one another. Lastly, the digital healthcare market is a growing market where billions are circulating, however it is not even sure if e-health is really going to improve healthcare and make it cheaper.

 

Concluding, there has to be done a lot more of testing and research regarding e-health before it will become a real revolution instead of a hype.

 

Sources:

Zorgvisie. (2016). Zorgvisie – E-health dossier. [online] Available at: https://www.zorgvisie.nl/home/dossiers/e-health/ [Accessed 5 Oct. 2016].

Nos.nl. (2016). ‘Zo’n e-consult vind ik het handigste dat er is’. [online] Available at: http://nos.nl/artikel/2126626-zo-n-e-consult-vind-ik-het-handigste-dat-er-is.html [Accessed 5 Oct. 2016].

Haks, K. (2016). Smartphonestress. FysioPraxis, (9), p.3.

Nos.nl. (2016). E-health: hype of zorgrevolutie?. [online] Available at: http://nos.nl/nieuwsuur/artikel/2114269-e-health-hype-of-zorgrevolutie.html [Accessed 5 Oct. 2016].

Ad.nl. (2016). Patiënt komt niet bij digidokter. [online] Available at: http://www.ad.nl/dossier-nieuws/patient-komt-niet-bij-digidokter~ae12f17e/ [Accessed 7 Oct. 2016].

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