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A Review of the Orthopod
Family of Mailing Lists
Discussion
with a colleague is one of the great safety valves in medicine. Stopping someone in a
corridor, waving some radiographs and bouncing an idea off him or her is such a
time-honoured activity that it is affectionately known as a "corridor consult"
or a "curbside consult." No one has ever suggested that these informal meetings
are a substitute for careful and skilful medical practice, nor, on the other hand,
that advice so gained should be monitored, controlled and exposed to "quality
control". Yet there must be few people in orthopaedics who have not had recourse to a
corridor consult or who have not offered one, and most of us would acknowledge their
value.
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Since the
internet could connect anyone in orthopaedics to anyone, it is not surprising that seeking
advice across the internet in the form of a corridor consult through cyberspace was one of
the earliest and remains one of the most vibrant activities on the medical internet. In
theory one should be able to ask the advice of the foremost authorities of the field in
which one's problem lies. This review examines this process in practice as found in the
Orthopod family of mailing lists.
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A mailing
list is essentially a list of email addresses held by a server. If your address is on that
list you have the privilege of receiving all the messages that are sent to the list and
the privilege of sending messages yourself. As with any email message the communication
has a subject, and if you reply, the same "subject" is retained. Sometimes
during the course of the exchanges the subject gets altered but if there is clear
continuity with one messages obviously being in response to another, the whole collection
of messages is called a "thread". Threads are probably a more valid subdivision
of the messages that get sent to a mailing list because the subject can be changed
arbitrarily while still adhering to the thread. However, it is also true that some very
different topics can get discussed while still ostensibly on the same "thread".
Thus a typical recent exchange started with a question about the use of intramedullary rod
fixation in femoral fractures in the paediatric age group. The experience and techniques
of a number of surgeons using this technique was presented complete with geographical
notes about the French city of Nancy where some strong proponents work. The discussion
then centred on the flexiblility and metallurgical make-up and design of such devices.
This provoked questions from third world orthopaedic surgeons about whether cheaper and
longer established devices such as Kirschner wires or Rush rods could be used. This in
turn produced a discussion of the use of intramedullary rod fixation in forearm fractures
in children and the devices and techniques available for use in that problem. Along the
way several Xrays were sent to the group, several references were cited and the addresses
of commercial suppliers of the equipment being discussed was publicised. This example is
described in some detail to give the flavour of exchanges on the mailing list, the free
association of ideas, the international nature of the audience and the overall helpfulness
of the participants.
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The
original Orthopaedic Mailing List (OML) was started in 1993 and continued until December
1997. It was strongly represented in the USA and fostered such an intense sense of
community that several of the subscribers decided to meet at the 1996 American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) meeting. This first "Geek Meet" was such a success
that several friendships initiated on the mailing list were cemented at the meeting and
have resulted in fruitful international collaboration since. It also became clear to the
small group of orthopaedic surgeons working on posting web page information to the
internet that the mailing list was the best way to publicise their work and seek
colleagues. In July 1997 the Orthopod List was founded. It was initially seen as
complementary rather than competitive with OML. Orthopod is based in the UK and is part of
Mailbase, a collection of more than 2000 academic mailing lists supported by funds from
the United Kingdom Joint Information Systems Committee of the Higher Education Funding
Councils for England, Scotland and Wales and the Department of Education of Education for
Northern Ireland. Its aim was more academic in the beginning and, in fact, case
discussions were discouraged unless part of a research topic. However, in December 1997
the server for OML withdrew support for the mailing list and the two lists merged. While
retaining its academic basis and its cosmopolitan membership, Orthopod was strengthened by
many new members from OML and by vigorous case discussion. As the time came around for the
1998 AAOS meeting, it was clear that another "Geek Meet" was eagerly
anticipated. At the same time another movement in the internet was fostering the formation
of a co-operative Gateway to Orthopaedics on the Internet. Orthogate - a name coined on
one of the orthopaedic mailing lists by Gobinder Singh - was intensely discussed and
publicly planned on Orthopod for months before the inaugural meeting in March 1998. The
next development was the foundation, in April 1998, of the speciality lists Arthroplasty, Hand, Limb Reconstruction, Spine and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine. This was
in response to a perception by some members that they were receiving too many messages per
day, many about areas of orthopaedics they were not interested in.
Although it
is up to each participant to store messages as they come in, the mailbase organisation
does also store the messages and archive them at the mailbase site. For each list these is
a separate collection indexed from a page at (i.e.)
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/orthopod/archive.html
for the orthopod list, and
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/arthroplasty/archive.html
for the arthroplasty list etc. From this page you can find out how to join the list, the
names and addresses of the list owners, and members, a description of the purpose of the
list and the groundrules. Every message sent to the list in the last two years has been
stored and archived by the month organised by date, sender, subject and thread. Thus it
would be a simple matter to find the message sent by a particular indvidual in a
particular time frame; and not too difficult to answer more open questions like "what
has been said about forearm fractures?" Mailbase archiving system does store some
illustrations but a number of other orthopaedic sites do collect cases from the mailing
list and post them with the original question. BoneHome
has done this from the days of the OML and Belgian
Orthoweb has a fine collection as well. It has often been said that between cases,
discussion, illustration and references the raw material for a textbook is being rapidly
written.
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Fig 1.
Messages per month in the Orthopod family of mailing lists
Click to
enlarge...
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