A Harris  Online poll found that patients who use the Internet to look for health  information are more likely to ask more specific and informed questions of  their doctors and to comply with prescribed treatment plans. The "school  of lay medicine" found on the Internet offers an important opportunity for  patients to become actively engaged in their own care. During the pre-Internet  era, medical information was published in medical textbooks and journals only,  whereas patients can now gain access to citations of more than 12 million  medical articles online. 
  Several 
monitoring devices using the Internet have  been developed to help patients manage their medical conditions at home. For  example, diabetic patients can test their blood glucose level by using an  e-device, which with the click of a computer mouse downloads the result to a  health care practitioner. Patients with heart failure can step on an e-scale,  which sends instantaneous 
alerts to  health care professionals when the patient's weight exceeds the desired range.  An e-shirt can be worn which transmits heart rate and respiratory rate over the  Internet. A pill-sized camera can be swallowed which transmits pictures of the  digestive tract over the Internet. Research is needed regarding health  outcomes, cost effectiveness, as well as the long-term acceptance of these  devices by patients.
 
              The federal  government has invested $28 million to evaluate home glucose monitoring via the  Internet to homes of underserved rural and inner-city residents in 
New York State.  The largest eHealth grant ever funded by the government, this study will serve  as an important test case for the possibility of e-technology to improve health  outcomes.