Feb 23, 2023: Foundation story – Origins of QMed Foundation – “The CD Story”

Feb 23, 2023: Foundation story – Origins of QMed Foundation – “The CD Story”

People often ask me what made me start QMed. The answer is – several things, but a big trigger was the QMed’s “General Medicine CD”

What was this CD about? When QMed was first only a private limited company, one of the activities we often did was to carry out PubMed searches for students, and doctors who asked for them. Every topic was different and obviously, the search steps were different.

Rajeev Surana, who used to work with us then kept saying “You should not have to re-do searches every time. Every effort needs to be re-usable”. My standard response used to be – “When every individual’s search request is for a different topic, how could we not re-do them?”

And yet, we deliberated upon this thought. And came up with a  great idea. Why don’t we start a project where we list several topics and build in a ready PubMed search for each of them? Once people understand this, we could create more projects with more topics, and even make customized ones for those who need them.

We decided to choose 20 general diseases and conditions like Asthma, Diabetes, Hypertension and more. For each topic, we planned 10 subtopics like causes, diagnosis, treatment etc. For every subtopic, we planned three links. Links to

a) Not free (articles with evidence)

b) Free articles 

c) Articles available in common journals

Here is a sample

Glaucoma-complications 

a) Not free

b) Free articles

c) Common journals 

We thus had 500+ hyperlinks to “pre-done” PubMed searches. When one clicked a link, it would open PubMed, run a search on a topic and fetch  just a reasonable number of results (around 30-50 in most cases) – real time. We had built the query so that only the latest and most relevant results showed up.

We launched this product – on a CD then – as we did not want people to remember another password. This was in 2004. People were not yet comfortable with remembering too many passwords. The CD also had a PubMed tutorial – both – in a digital format as well as a print booklet.  We had priced the CD at a reasonable Rs 350/-

We expected large sales. We sold just a few.

But there was a key incident which was a major contributor to our decision to start a not for profit trust. A doctor heard about our CD and called us for details. My colleague explained it all clearly. The content in the CD was a PubMed tutorial. Many topics were available as “Internet links”. He would have to run the CD with an internet connection on. Every time he clicked a topic, it would run a real time search and fetch him the latest updates. He heard it all.

After getting the CD he called us and said

“This is only PubMed which is free and you are charging me for it. I don’t want it”.

After all our explaining, he had not understood anything about our offering.

This incident made us feel strongly about the need to create a not for profit arm. We felt it was high time we started teaching what PubMed actually was and what capabilities it has for structured searching. 

Only after students and professionals had the necessary literacy would they be able to appreciate something like this.

It took us another three years to register and formalize QMed Knowledge Foundation – in end December 2007. Between then and now – 2023, which is about 15 years, we have conducted nearly 250 workshops and delivered more than 500 lectures. The need is still strong! We need to reach a large denominator.

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