The Web Returns to Health
'The Last Frontier' on Internet Draws Big Names and Their Money

By Annys Shin
Washington Post Staff Writer

Tuesday, August 8, 2006; D01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/07/AR2006080701152_pf.html


Ninety-five million Americans -- about 80 percent of online adults -- have 
searched the Web for health information in the past year, and the 
overwhelming majority have been disappointed.

More than 70 percent of those searchers either did not find what they were 
looking for or had a hard time knowing what to believe, according to market 
research studies by Jupiter Research and Yankelovich Inc.

That frustration has attracted some famous deep pockets, including America 
Online co-founder Steve Case, his former employer Time Warner Inc., the 
Carlyle Group and Allen & Co. Together, they have put more than $100 
million into building virtual destinations that offer consumers something 
beyond disease encyclopedias.

Some want to make it as easy to choose a doctor as a restaurant. Others 
eventually hope to offer "virtual assisted living" by monitoring medicines 
or pacemakers remotely, so the elderly can stay in their homes longer.

"The health category is the last frontier where the Internet has not yet 
transformed that industry, the way it has done for travel, finance, and 
commerce," Wayne T. Gattinella, chief executive of WebMD Health Corp., said.

Harnessing the Web to make health care more user-friendly has been a holy 
grail for entrepreneurs since the earliest days of the dot-com boom. But 
like many online content businesses, they failed because they could not 
figure out how to make money.

"The mistake that's been made by a lot of entrepreneurs who have pushed 
those approaches was an 'if we build it they will come' philosophy," said 
Jay Savan, a benefits consultant in the St. Louis office of Towers Perrin.

Some sites, such as Drkoop.com relied too heavily on advertising revenue. 
Named for the former U.S. surgeon general C. Everett Koop, it was worth 
more than $1 billion at one point, but went out of business in 2001 not 
long after going public. Its assets -- mainly Internet domain names -- were 
later sold for $186,000 in bankruptcy court. It is now owned by the 
HealthCentral Network, an Arlington-based company that is part of the 
second wave of health information Web businesses.

The dominant player in the field, 10-year-old WebMD, survived by merging 
with Healtheon, founded in 1996 by Netscape co-founder Jim Clark. He saw 
the Internet as the best way to bring doctors and patients together and 
"get all the other [jerks] out of the way." The combined company, which 
also delved into insurance claims processing, physician practice management 
software and plastics, did not post a profit until 2003.

The nearly $2 trillion health-care industry remains as fragmented and 
frustrating as ever. But the market for online health information and 
services has changed enough to make it a viable business, investors, 
entrepreneurs and analysts said.

A May 2005 Pew Internet & American Life Project study -- which reported 
that about 95 million people have searched the Web for health information 
-- found more people were turning to the Web for information about diet, 
exercise and over-the-counter drugs. They also do more "health homework" 
online, such as comparing physicians and hospitals.

"The consumer is starting to expect the same information with respect to a 
health provider as they expect with an airline or investment vehicle," 
Gattinella said. "Those are the big forces that will accelerate changes in 
our industry in the next five years."

It will still be a while yet before finding a heart surgeon is as easy as 
booking an airline ticket on Orbitz or Travelocity.

"I don't see we're at an inflection point because there is still major 
limitation on quality information available . . . [and] still limitations 
on cost information. Those limitations on data are not about to disappear," 
said Paul Ginsberg, president of Health System Change, a non-partisan 
research organization in Washington.

But with out-of-pocket medical expenses rising faster than family income, 
and a small but rapidly growing number of the insured turning to 
health-savings accounts and high-deductible health plans, consumers have 
begun shopping around, if not for the best hospital for coronary bypass 
graft surgery, then at the very least for prescription drugs.

Just as important as changing consumer habits, advertisers are also 
spending more money on Web ads.

WebMD spun off last year in a successful initial public offering and has 
seen its ad revenue grow. Last week, it reported a narrower second-quarter 
loss of $1.16 million, down from $1.5 million a year earlier. Advertising 
contributed to a 38 percent revenue increase.

As a result, big-name investors are once again bankrolling health 
information Web sites.

Time Warner has sunk money into Waterfront Media, a four-year-old Brooklyn 
publisher of self-help information founded by Ben Wolin and Michael 
Keriakos, two former executives with spirituality and faith Web site Beliefnet.

Unlike three years ago, when money for Internet start-ups was harder to 
come by, the company this past year raised $6 million from several sources, 
including Time Warner, to build EverydayHealth.com. The site, set to launch 
later this year, will deliver personalized health information, even by 
phone or personal digital assistant, to more than 11 million people who 
have created profiles on one of Waterfront's existing health-related sites.

The Carlyle Group, Allen & Co., and Sequoia Capital last year invested in 
HealthCentral Network, formerly ChoiceMedia Inc., which bought a collection 
of sites created during the dot-com boom and revamped them into a network 
of 25 condition-specific destinations that offer physician-reviewed 
information and the ability to connect with ordinary people who have 
experienced the same illness.

Both HealthCentral Network and Waterfront rely on advertising, and could 
benefit from a shift among pharmaceutical companies away from television 
and toward the Web, where they have unlimited time and space to relay such 
information as side effects.

Revolution Health, probably the most ambitious of WebMD's would-be 
competitors, is backed by Case and board members/investors such as Carly 
Fiorina, former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard Co., Franklin D. Raines, 
former chairman and chief executive of Fannie Mae, and Stephen Wiggins, 
founder of Oxford Health Plans.

Its Web portal, Revolutionhealth.com, is slated to launch in the fall. 
Revolution Health plans to offer, in addition to the usual searchable 
encyclopedia of disease information, tools for finding doctors, making 
appointments and managing health-related expenses.

What sets Revolution Health apart is its offline investments in walk-in 
retail clinics at places such as Walgreens and Wal-Mart for minor medical 
issues, and in insurance providers that offer high-deductible plans 
directly to consumers.

"It's best to attack this problem through multiple prisms and build a set 
of services that can attract an audience and can aggregate benefits to 
those consumers as well as those who want to provide services to those 
audiences," Case said.

RevolutionHealth.com plans to make money by selling customized services to 
employers and health plans, selling advertising and charging membership 
fees for a suite of premium services, which may include access to 
better-quality doctors.

"We don't want to be the place you go to when you're not feeling well. We 
want it to feel more like your buddy list and your portfolio, a service 
that engages you because it's personalized, several times a day, not 
several times a year," Case said.

There were rumors earlier this year that Google was also looking into the 
delving into the online health information business, a development that 
does not surprise any of the current players.

"I think you'll see several other companies coming into this space because 
it is such a huge marketplace and so underpenetrated at this point," Martin 
J. Wygod, chairman of WebMD, told analysts during a May conference call.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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