medInnovations: Medical Innovation
Description
From Valente (1995) Coleman, Katz and Menzel from Columbia University's Bureau of Applied Research
studied the adoption of tetracycline by physiciams in four Illinois communities
in 1954.[...] Tetracycline was a powerful and useful antibiotic just introduced in
the mid-1950s
Format
A data frame with 125 rows and 59 columns:
Source
The Medical Innovation data were stored in file cabinets in a basement
building at Columbia University. Ron Burt (1987) acquired an NSF grant to
develop network diffusion models and retrieve the original surveys and enter
them into a database. He distributed copies of the data on diskette and sent
one to me, Tom Valente, and I imported onto a PC environment.Details
The collected dataset has 125 respondents (doctors), and spans 17 months of data
collected in 1955. Time of adoption of non-adopters has been set to month
18 (see the manual entry titled Difussion Network Datasets
).
References
Coleman, J., Katz, E., & Menzel, H. (1966). Medical innovation: A diffusion
study (2nd ed.). New York: Bobbs-MerrillValente, T. W. (1995). Network models of the diffusion of innovations (2nd ed.).
Cresskill N.J.: Hampton Press.