A national database of telemedicine was set up with the sponsorship of the
British government to provide a source of information to anyone researching
the field or proposing a telemedicine project. To monitor the readership o
f the database we subscribed to a free Internet service called Extreme Trac
king. Since the Website was launched there have been over 9000 visits from
over 5000 different Internet addresses. The peak was in the week after laun
ch, when it had 400 visitors in four days. Subsequently, the number of visi
ts tailed off slightly, but nine months later the database was still attrac
ting about 800 visits per month. The majority of visits were via links from
other Websites. Of the 288 different Websites identified, the one operated
by the UK National Health Service (NHS) Information Authority generated th
e most visits, suggesting that many readers were from within the NHS. The s
econd most common form of referral was from search engines. Most visits wer
e on weekdays and during normal UK working hours. Taken together with the f
act that the Internet domain that generated most visits was the '.uk' one,
we concluded that most readers were based in the UK and accessed the site a
s part of their jobs rather than as a spare-time activity. This is encourag
ing for the take-up of telemedicine in the UK.