TidBITS#575/09-Apr-01
=====================

  Hate the wait to ask a simple medical question of your doctor in
  this age of Internet email? This week, Dr. Ron Risley looks at the
  implications of online medical correspondence from doctors' and
  patients' viewpoints. We also sort out the facts about Apple's
  recent firmware upgrades and shift our focus away from Mac OS X
  with a review of The Mac OS 9 Bible. In the news, check out the
  releases of Netscape Communicator 4.77 and Toast 5 Titanium.

Topics:
    MailBITS/09-Apr-01
    Apple Firmware Update Problems Clarified and Solved
    BookBITS: The Mac OS 9 Bible
    What's Up, eDoc? Emailing Your Doctor, Part 1

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-575.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#575_09-Apr-01.etx>

Copyright 2001 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/09-Apr-01
------------------

**Netscape Releases Communicator 4.77** -- Netscape has released
  Communicator 4.77, a maintenance update that provides a few minor
  fixes to the company's older Web browser for the Mac (most of
  Netscape's development efforts are focused on Netscape 6 - see
  "Netscape 6 Arrives on Wobbly Legs" in TidBITS-556_). The new
  version corrects a problem with bookmarks added to the Personal
  Toolbar, plus two JavaScript related issues: Command-clicking some
  JavaScript URLs wasn't always properly handled, and Communicator
  now always handles JavaScript URLs internally. The new version is
  a 14.7 MB download. [JLC]

<http://home.netscape.com/download/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06206>


**Toast 5 Titanium Adds Video CD Support** -- When Apple announced
  the CD and DVD burning capabilities of its new Macs, we wondered
  what it mean for Roxio's Toast, the current standard in media
  burning. Now, Roxio has released Toast 5 Titanium, a new version
  that can burn Video CDs which can be played on most DVD Video
  players. The new version also improves its MP3 Disc, Data CD,
  Audio CD, and CD Copy formats, includes background burning and a
  new interface, and adds support for Apple's iMovie and iTunes.
  Toast 5 Titanium is now shipping for $90. [JLC]

<http://www.roxio.com/en/products/toast/>


**UpdateAgent Correction** -- After reading last week's article on
  installing Mac OS X (see "Out of the Box: Installing Mac OS X" in
  TidBITS-574_), the folks at Insider Software pointed out that the
  TidBITS copy editing team might want to spend some time back in
  the box. We incorrectly listed UpdateAgent as "UpgradeAgent," and
  priced it at $70 instead of the actual $50 amount, which covers
  one year of service. Insider Software also noted that UpdateAgent
  is available on CD, which is handy for consultants or people with
  more than one Mac. Our stash of wet noodles has thankfully been
  drying in a closet for several weeks, but rest assured they've
  been re-moistened in preparation for a good flogging. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06384>
<http://www.insidersoftware.com/>


**Poll Results: When Will X Mark the Spot?** Two weeks ago, we
  asked when you planned to install Mac OS X to gauge the level of
  interest among TidBITS readers. Of the nearly 900 respondents, a
  third said they'd install the new operating system immediately,
  another 16 percent said they'd be getting to installation between
  now and July 2001 (when Apple plans to start putting Mac OS X on
  new Macs by default), and 46 percent said they'd wait until some
  time after that July. Two aggregate conclusions: 95 percent of
  respondents plan to install Mac OS X eventually, and roughly half
  of those people plan to do so by July. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=72>


Apple Firmware Update Problems Clarified and Solved
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Last week, we wrote about firmware updates for recent Macs which
  Apple issued shortly after the release of Mac OS X, and which were
  causing updated Macs to stop seeing some third-party memory
  modules. (See "Avoid Current Firmware Updates" in TidBITS-574_.)
  Apple has now provided a statement to MacInTouch in which they say
  that the 4.1.7 and 4.1.8 firmware updates incorporate a new check
  that validates whether installed RAM is compatible to address
  random crashes and overall stability issues. The firmware update
  causes the Mac to ignore DIMMs that either don't meet Apple's
  specifications or that the update can't identify as compatible. Of
  course, this raises the question of why Apple initially didn't
  provide some warning about the possible consequences (which
  they've now done in the descriptions of these files on the Apple
  Software Downloads site), or why the firmware update itself
  doesn't test the DIMMs before installation.

<http://www.macintouch.com/firmwareramprob2.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06380>

  Glenn Anderson, author of Qualcomm's Eudora Internet Mail Server,
  has stepped up to the challenge with DIMM First Aid (previously
  called DIMMCheck), a free utility you can run in Mac OS 9 to see
  if your DIMMs are likely to fail Apple's newly enforced
  specifications. If the test fails, DIMM First Aid can reprogram
  the offending DIMMs' Serial Presence Detect EEPROMs so they won't
  later be disabled by the firmware updater. DIMM First Aid is a 6K
  download.

<http://www.eudora.com/eims/>
<http://mactcp.org.nz/dimmfirstaid.sit>

  So, before running the 4.1.7 or 4.1.8 firmware updates (which
  Apple says "dramatically improve system stability and
  performance"), be sure to check your Mac's memory with DIMM First
  Aid. If your DIMMs fail, use DIMM First Aid to fix them. If your
  DIMMs pass, it's almost certainly safe to update your firmware.
  You can download the firmware updates from Apple's Software
  Downloads Web site (search for "firmware update") or get them via
  the Software Update control panel, but note that the firmware
  updates on the Mac OS 9.1 CD-ROM that comes with Mac OS X are much
  older versions. We said in "Out of the Box: Installing Mac OS X"
  in TidBITS-574_ that you shouldn't run these firmware updates;
  that's a mistake, and we'd encourage anyone installing Mac OS X to
  run at least the older firmware updates on the Mac OS 9.1 CD-ROM
  beforehand.

<http://asu.info.apple.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06384>

  If you're in the nerve-wracking position of having the firmware
  updates already disable one or more DIMMs, first run DIMM First
  Aid, which should be able to fix the problem even after the DIMMs
  have been disabled. If, for some reason, that doesn't work,
  contact the vendor from whom you purchased the RAM. Most of them,
  according to a Ramseeker survey, are accepting returned DIMMs.
  They either replace the DIMMs or reprogram the EEPROMs for you.

  In the end, Glenn Anderson deserves the highest accolades for his
  work in creating DIMM First Aid, in contrast with Apple, whose
  release of an update that could disable hardware without warning
  was negligent in the extreme.

<http://xlr8yourmac.com/OSX/FirmwareUpdate_missingRAM.html#apple>
<http://www.ramseeker.com/firmware.shtml>


BookBITS: The Mac OS 9 Bible
----------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>

  Computer books can be big, because computers - as well as the
  applications and operating systems they use - are far more complex
  than their makers would often like to admit. Although size isn't
  always important, it is true that a huge tome often contains
  information left out of other books.

  The Mac OS 9 Bible, by Lon Poole and Todd Stauffer (Hungry Minds,
  $40) is one such book. It does not offer an introduction to the
  Mac OS 9 or a tutorial approach to using it, but tries to present
  the whole shebang - and at over 900 pages, there is little
  missing. You might ask why it would be worth buying a Mac OS 9
  book at the dawn of Apple's release of Mac OS X, but, aside from
  the fact that not all Macs are able to run Mac OS X, I strongly
  suspect that many Macintosh users are taking a wait-and-see
  attitude toward Mac OS X. And if you're planning to stick with Mac
  OS 9 for another year, or, if you're planning to run older
  applications in the Classic environment (which uses Mac OS 9.1),
  there's no reason not to make the most of it in that time.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0764534149/tidbitselectro00A/>

  You get a sense of the depth of this book in the first few pages -
  the table of contents alone is 22 pages long. Poole and Stauffer
  have compiled seemingly as much information as possible on the Mac
  OS, and they present it in a clear and easy-to-understand manner.

  However, the Mac OS 9 Bible is not a book for Macintosh beginners,
  as the authors specify in the introduction. It won't tell you how
  to point and click or how to select menu items. Instead, it's for
  those who want to know how everything works, or who want a
  reference book at their side when a question arises.

  The first 100 pages or so deal with the basics of using the
  desktop and the Finder, as well as what's new and cool in Mac OS
  9. (Note that it does not cover the recent Mac OS 9.1 update; I
  doubt there will be a new edition taking new features such as the
  Finder's new Window menu into account, but Mac OS 9.1's visible
  changes are mostly minimal.) This material is geared toward
  inexperienced users, but the sheer quantity of information
  presented will probably turn off such users. In short, don't give
  the Mac OS 9 Bible to someone to get them up and running with a
  new iMac (TidBITS will publish a comparative review of some iMac-
  oriented books in the near future).

  The Mac OS 9 Bible was not written to be read cover-to-cover, but
  it includes everything, in well thought-out chapters, and contains
  excellent explanations of some of the key aspects of the Mac OS.
  Just a few examples: the section on fonts gives an overview of the
  different types of fonts and how they work; the two comprehensive
  chapters on printing tell more than you will ever need to know
  about the subject; and the chapter titled "Adjust Controls and
  Preferences" tells you how to tweak every tweakable part of your
  system.

  The Mac OS 9 Bible also includes a good chapter on Apple's system-
  level scripting technology, AppleScript - something that many Mac
  OS books mention merely in passing. Power users have long
  appreciated the automation possibilities presented by AppleScript,
  such as mounting network volumes, changing file attributes,
  integrating applications, or applying folder actions (scripts that
  watch over folders and act when files are added or removed). It
  can be hard to get started with AppleScript, but with a good
  introduction like this, even novices can start writing scripts
  that work wonders.

  For those interested in setting up a network (home or home-office
  networks are becoming increasingly common), three chapters tell
  all about networking and file sharing. I did notice one
  significant omission, though: Apple's AirPort wireless networking
  technology warrants only a brief mention that covers less than one
  page. AirPort deserves significantly more attention, since being
  able to set up a network without running cables through your home
  is quite empowering. (See "Going to the AirPort" in TidBITS-567_
  for more on setting up and using AirPort networks.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06300>

  I was pleased to see a chapter on shareware - there are many
  excellent applications available for the Mac that are not sold
  through traditional channels, and, in more than 20 pages, the Mac
  OS 9 Bible presents dozens of the best shareware programs, along
  with the URLs to find their latest versions. Many people are
  unaware of these gems, and some of the best enhancements to the
  Mac OS come from shareware sources.

  Another hefty chapter on tips and secrets goes beyond the basics,
  but I was a bit disappointed by the troubleshooting chapter. The
  Mac OS may be powerful and generally easier to use than Windows,
  but Mac users have their share of problems as well. Though the
  pages on preventive measures are excellent, I would have preferred
  to see a more thorough explanation of some of the most common
  problems and their solutions. If you're looking for Macintosh
  troubleshooting information, pick up a copy of the 4th edition of
  Ted Landau's long-standing Sad Macs, Bombs, and Other Disasters
  (Peachpit Press, $35).

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/020169963X/tidbitselectro00A/>

  Compared to David Pogue's Mac OS 9: The Missing Manual, which I
  reviewed recently, the Mac OS 9 Bible offers roughly twice the
  number of pages, and presents information differently. Where Pogue
  takes a didactic approach aimed at teaching you how to use Mac OS
  9, Poole and Stauffer are more exhaustive, digging into every nook
  and cranny of the Mac OS. The former is a great book for general
  users who want to get a handle on their Macs, but the Mac OS 9
  Bible fills in all the missing details that are inevitably lost
  when trying to present a coherent lesson.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06089>

  All in all, the Mac OS 9 Bible is excellent, even though I found
  it lacking in a few areas. I consider myself a power user, yet
  I've referred to it many times and, in most cases, found the
  answers to my questions (an first-class index and glossary of key
  terms also help find the answers inside). It's a bit pricey at
  $40, but when you think of the time the Mac OS 9 Bible can save
  you, it is definitely worth the cost. Well-written, clear, and
  with an excellent layout, this is one of the best and most
  complete books on Mac OS 9.

  [Kirk McElhearn is a freelance translator and technical writer
  living in a village in the French Alps.]


What's Up, eDoc? Emailing Your Doctor, Part 1
---------------------------------------------
  by Ron Risley <ron@risley.net>

  It's a frustration I'm sure everyone has experienced: you have a
  medical question. You want to follow the advice in those
  pharmaceutical commercials and "ask your doctor," but the next
  clinic appointment is three months away and it seems silly (and
  expensive) to schedule an appointment just to ask a simple
  question. You try calling, but you end up on hold, or talking to a
  receptionist, or maybe you even get your doctor's voice mail but
  you have trouble explaining the problem to a recording.

  Wouldn't it be great if you could just email your physician? You
  could compose your thoughts carefully and at leisure, then send
  the correspondence immediately without listening to hold music or
  explaining personal problems to a secretary or a recording
  machine. Using email to communicate with our doctors mirrors the
  vision many of us have of using information technology to
  recapture some of the personal experience that mass-market
  commercialization has taken away.


**The Doctors' Side** -- Using email is a tempting proposition for
  the physician as well. Patients might be surprised at the
  conditions under which many doctors practice in our high-pressure,
  managed care world. For example, you might think your doctor has a
  plush office with a large desk, telephone, computer, and a
  clerical staff to handle filing, correspondence, and the like.
  Reality can be far different. My family practice clinic - at a
  prestigious university medical center - has a single large
  workroom (euphemistically called the "doctor's lounge") that
  serves as an office for nearly the entire practice. About forty
  doctors share three telephones and four small desks (no drawers,
  lockers, or other space for personal files or supplies). We have
  no clerical staff - I personally handle every phone call, letter,
  prescription refill, fax, or government form for my patients.
  There are a few Windows 95 computers in the lounge, but they are
  maintained by the university's Information Services Department and
  have a downtime approaching an astonishing 80 percent. Worse, all
  medical records are kept on paper in a central warehouse.
  Reviewing a record requires that you request that it be delivered
  to the clinic, where it often gets lost long before it finds you
  in the crowded workroom.

  Time is another constraint. Our salaries are based on a forty hour
  workweek, but to meet minimum productivity requirements and other
  mandatory commitments while providing a decent level of patient
  care often requires over seventy hours per week. Our schedules
  have _no_ time allotted for "non-reimbursed patient contact,"
  which generally means answering telephone calls.

  Physicians in the clinic use various strategies to cope with these
  primitive conditions. The most common is to limit patient contact
  to a scheduled office visit, when records are available and some
  time (often ten minutes or so) is specifically allocated for
  patient contact. This approach ensures some resources are
  available, but I feel as though it places a burden on patients,
  who cannot even ask "Should I take this daily medication in the
  morning or at night?" without scheduling a visit, waiting weeks
  their appointment, waiting hours in the germ-infested waiting
  room, and handling the costs of parking and a copayment.

  Several of us have tried addressing these shortcomings with
  handheld computers. I was an early adopter of Newton technology,
  and migrated to Psion machines running the EPOC operating system
  when Apple killed the Newton.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04735>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04760>
<http://www.risley.net/comp.comm/newton/dayinthelife.html>
<http://www.risley.net/psion/>

  With a computer in my pocket, I could have some basic information
  about my patients with me at all times. I could log voice mail and
  calls so I have a record of what was said, and I could receive and
  send email practically anyplace using my Psion and GSM mobile
  phone (except, as luck would have it, from the family practice
  clinic, which has very poor GSM reception).


**The Benefits of Email** -- If all my patients would communicate
  by email, I could handle much of my patient correspondence from my
  home office. I could quickly triage messages and concentrate on
  the more urgent ones, as opposed to voice mail where I might waste
  an entire break listening to a few messages (more likely than not,
  long-winded administrative ones) without leaving time to return
  calls. I cannot return calls from home because it is generally
  late by the time I get there, and it is disruptive to my family
  for me to carry on medical and psychiatric conversations at home.
  Returning calls from work is difficult, as there is no place to
  sit and speak privately.

  Even more important, email gives me a written record of exactly
  what a patient told me and what steps I took in reply. I can refer
  back to that at a later date if we're trying to figure out when a
  symptom first occurred and whether it's worsening or improving.
  The patient, too, benefits from written instructions that can be
  referred to, and has an open pipeline for clarification if my
  instructions aren't clear.

  It sounds great, and it can work well, but there are some
  characteristics of email which might not be obvious to the average
  patient and which deserve some extra attention.


**Privacy** -- Medical records privacy is far, far more important
  than the average person realizes. It didn't take long after I
  started medical practice for me to become profoundly uncomfortable
  with the cavalier way both providers and patients treat private
  medical information. When most people are sick, they just want to
  get better. They aren't fully aware of how their treatment records
  might, on some future day, affect their ability to hold certain
  jobs, obtain insurance, get credit, or even drive a car.

  As health care institutions slowly and reluctantly move away from
  19th century style record keeping, privacy advocates have raised
  the banner of medical privacy to delay the implementation of
  physician support systems that could improve the quality of care.
  Never mind that no such hue and cry was heard when billing systems
  - with equally privileged medical information - were automated
  back in the last century. Now that technology is being proposed
  for the benefit of the patient instead of the billing office,
  extreme caution is being urged.

  And it's about time. As frustrating as it is to have to tolerate a
  double standard - electronic record keeping systems are being held
  to much stricter controls than paper-based records ever have been
  - the recent attention to privacy is a good thing. Medical records
  have become largely the property of insurers, billers, and
  attorneys instead of a tool maintained by and for the patient to
  assist the doctor in rendering care. If we truly restore privacy
  to the records, they will necessarily revert to that latter, more
  important role.

  So what constitutes a private record? Most people are comfortable
  with the privacy of a telephone call. That's pretty reasonable.
  Wiretaps exist, legal and otherwise, but phone calls - even
  digitally switched as they all are now - are ephemeral. Someone
  pretty much has to operate the tap in real time, and pretty much
  has to have a human being doing the listening (or reviewing the
  recording). We have a long tradition, in the United States at
  least, of not randomly monitoring telephone conversations on a
  large scale. Unless you're a terrorist, organized criminal, or
  large-scale street drug importer, chances are your telephone calls
  aren't monitored.

  Next on the list is the fax. Medical records are routinely faxed
  around the country, from doctors' offices to insurers to
  government agencies to hospitals and back. The fax has become, far
  and away, the most common mode of transport for medical
  information. Though faxes are carried on standard telephone lines,
  they are less secure than phone conversations. First, it is
  relatively easy to monitor telephone lines for fax (and modem)
  signals and record the results. Also, if someone dials a single
  digit incorrectly, your fax could appear on any random fax machine
  in the country; this happens on my personal fax machine with
  amusing frequency. Most importantly, fax machines at the receiving
  end often dump your private records into a wire basket or onto the
  floor where they are picked up and (if we're lucky) filed by a
  clerk with virtually no incentive to keep the information private.
  Even the building maintenance crew has probably seen your faxed
  medical records at one time or another.

  Opposing editorials in the Psychiatric News a few years back
  debated the question of email confidentiality (psychiatrists are
  notoriously picky about confidentiality, such that it is common
  practice to keep two sets of books: a simple record of visits and
  treatments for the bean counters and attorneys, and a set of
  private process notes detailing what patients actually say in
  therapy). One position was that email was as private as a
  telephone call. The other was that one might as well publish one's
  correspondence in the New York Times. As much as I wanted to
  believe the former position, my experience as a data security
  consultant forced me to embrace the latter reluctantly. Email is
  carried by organizations which lack the regulatory and historical
  incentives to ensure privacy. Email, because of its electronic
  nature, is very easy to monitor and can be recorded and preserved
  indefinitely at a very low cost. Unlike either telephone calls or
  faxes, email _is_ recorded by your ISP (and possibly others) while
  in transit and awaiting retrieval. That recorded data often makes
  its way onto backup media where it might be indefinitely archived.
  In other words, even if no one has any interest in your records
  now, they could conceivably go digging through archive tapes from
  AOL or EarthLink ten years from now and find private information.

  Another factor in email privacy is that using email seems to
  create an illusion of privacy. Studies have shown patients are
  much more willing to divulge information when corresponding by
  email than when writing a letter or leaving a telephone message.
  Under current guidelines, though, email correspondence with your
  physician may become a part of the medical record. Even if email
  were perfectly private, the result is still only as secure as
  current medical records. Not reassuring.


**What's a Patient to Do?** Caveats aside, the benefits of email
  for most patients will still outweigh the risks. If your doctor is
  willing to communicate by email, make sure you both have a basic
  understanding of the limits of confidentiality of email. Doctors
  who use email should have written policies available for patients
  to review.

  First, don't send your doctor an email message saying "I have
  crushing chest, arm, and jaw pain and I'm short of breath; I've
  taken six nitroglycerine pills and it hasn't gone away, it feels
  just like my last heart attack; should I call 9-1-1?" Make sure
  you understand how long it might be before you get a response. If
  it's important enough that you're worried about response time,
  consider a more immediate mode of communication. Remember, too,
  that email can get lost or routed incorrectly in both directions.

  Second, put some care into composing your message. As we all know,
  too often email is overly brief, confusing, or missing relevant
  details. Don't assume that your doctor will automatically know
  what you're talking about just because you've been dealing with
  the pain or illness for a few days. Clarity of communication is
  paramount if your doctor is to provide a useful response.

  Third, the $26 your insurance company paid for your office visit
  two years ago does not entitle you to a lifetime of free Internet
  medical advice. Simple questions with uncomplicated consequences
  are okay, but don't expect your doctor to retrieve your records,
  call the Center for Disease Control and your insurance company,
  and read half a dozen journal articles just to assuage you and
  your friends' medical curiosity. If you ask a question and your
  doctor tells you to come in rather than answering in depth,
  consider that it might just be a way of making sure that you get
  appropriate attention paid to your problem.

  In the next installment, we will explore policy and regulations
  affecting use of doctor-patient email, and discuss some practical
  strategies doctors and patients can use for improving the privacy
  of electronic correspondence.

  [Ron Risley is a family doctor, psychiatrist, former
  communications engineer, and inveterate hacker plying his
  trades in Sacramento, California.]
 
  $$
 
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