Tuesday, July 17, 2012
People Mashups - The power is in the discussion not the presentation #HCBOS #HCKC #HCSFBay
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
Seniors and health IT: A match made to avoid heaven! - All Things HIT
Dec 30 2011 6:46PM GMT
Seniors and health IT: A match made to avoid heaven!
Posted by: Patrick Howard
Senior care, telemedicine, eRx, Senior Citizens League, Cost of care
Last week I wrote a ceremonious, empathetic, “Christmassy” blog about being reminded how effective ”no tech” methods can be in achieving better medical outcomes, increasing medication compliance, and so on and so forth. Well after reviewing the results of a most recent study by the Senior Citizens League, one of the largest nonpartisan seniors advocacy groups in the USA, based in Alexandria, Virginia, I’m back on the health IT soapbox.
The study reviewed how the financial concerns of senior citizens affect their behavior when it comes to visiting the physician’s office, taking their medications and approaching their end of life care. The study surveyed 1200 seniors and revealed the following:
- 50% of respondents postponed filling prescriptions
- 61% postponed visits to dentists, opticians, or hearing specialists
- 44% postponed filling prescriptions or chose to take a lower dosage than prescribed
- 44% are spending at least $300 per month on medical expenses
- 10% are spending at least $750 per month
I admit, the results weren’t that surprising. Anytime a person has less money and/or no health insurance, they will put off visiting the doctor, dentist, and even not-comply with their medication. What was astounding to me, however, was the metrics’s large percentages and the high out-of-pocket monthly cost (points four and five above). After reviewing the results, I couldn’t help but think about solutions that, not surprisingly, were in the health IT realm! How can e-prescribing systems with a generic pricing default reduce the cost of the prescription? How can a clinical decision support systems be used for prevention, possibly eliminating that office visit and/or prescription? I thought about how we can use telehealth appointments, in lieu of physical office visits, and hence increasing visit compliance, as this would reduce their costs and is more convenient, especially for those in rural communities. Seniors wouldn’t have to get dressed, get driven, and spend valuable gas dollars visiting the doctor office.
While I know this is utopian, our seniors definitely deserve these impactful technologies, especially towards the end of life. The costs associated with care and the mere inconvenience of an office visit during the time when a person is the least mobile seems inhumane when these barrier-breaking technologies exist. Although there are some “no tech” solutions that could address theses concerns, such as lowering prices, this seem less likely than implementing the technologies. Yes, health care IT and seniors can truly be a match made to avoid heaven.
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Seniors are not as averse to technology as we often believe. They are connecting with their grandkids on Facebook and using technology to stay in touch with family. This is something that kids and grandkids can encourage. Using technology with them can help them become comfortable with using that same technology to help maintain their health.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
@mikearrington - Inspiring Lifestyle change - Being Less Fat « Uncrunched
Liz Welch at Inc. Magazine interviewed me in 2010 as part of her regular “The Way I Work” series. I had just moved to Seattle as part of my overall goal of (occasionally) detaching myself Silicon Valley.
In the article I talk about my erratic sleep patterns and my overall weight gain – some 50 pounds since I started TechCrunch in 2005.
In the year since I visited a sleep center and began focusing on getting enough sleep at regular hours. After a year of that my life has changed dramatically for the better. But the weight just kept creeping up. In the late summer 2011 I was a good 70 pounds heavier than I was when I started TechCrunch. And probably 90 pounds over my ideal weight.
Basically, I’m fat.
Being fat sucks. I’m not talking about the way I look. I’ve always been fairly comfortable in my own skin. But there are a whole bevy of health issues that fat people have to deal with. You don’t live as long as you should, and your quality of life is diminished substantially.
I’m trying to take control of this issue in my own way, and for the last several weeks I’ve been experimenting with a complete shift in lifestyle. So far, so good. And since a lot of people in our world deal are dealing with weight gain and health issues resulting from sitting in front of a computer for 16 hours a day, I thought I’d share.
The lightbulb went off in my head as I was reading Neal Stephenson’s new book Reamde (buy it here). In the book a character works at his computer from a treadmill, stationary bike or elliptical machine.
That prompted me to research “treadmill desks” and read about people’s experiences with them. Some people can’t stick with it, but a lot do. And the benefits are staggering. You’ll burn an extra 150 calories or so per hour. Most people say that they’re significantly more alert during the day, and they sleep much better at night.
So I jumped in. I elected not to buy a $5,000 unit (there are a couple out there), and building one myself seemed like too much trouble. Instead I bought a “TrekDesk” on Amazon and a cheap treadmill. I’ve been walking at 1.5 mph for 7-8 hours a day on average over the last few weeks. Some days I’m logging over 15 miles walking.
That’s not all though. I’m also using a Withings wifi scale to track my weight, and I’ve shared it with friends so they can keep an eye on it. The scale itself works great. The software is terrible but it does the job.
The final product I’m using is a Jawbone Up device. It’s a pedometer (very handy), it tracks sleep and it has a vibrating alarm feature to wake me up – much like the Lark device that I love so much. The only complaint I have about the Jawbone Up is that it doesn’t track steps very well on a treadmill with my hands up at a keyboard. But from what I can tell all pedometers seem to have this problem.
Things are just getting started. But the fact that I’m sleeping properly and have revamped my diet with my doctor, combined with actually walking miles and miles a day, has already had a profoundly positive effect on me.
I’ll update in a couple of months with any progress. If all goes well, in a year or two my body may have forgiven me for the TechCrunch years. We’ll see.
Inspiring post from @MikeArrington about how he has changed his lifestyle in order to be healthier and lose excess weight.
We are rooting for you Mike!
Sunday, October 23, 2011
#HCOR Here is the TweetReach Report from HealthCamp Oregon
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Health is Private. Wellness is Social.
On Friday I am attending a round table event in Washington DC. There is an amazing list of attendees and I am honored to be involved with such distinguished thought leaders from across the health care spectrum. The theme of the event is patient engagement. A topic near and dear to me and a subject of many discussions at HealthCamps around the country and around the world. Thinking about this topic led me to a recent post by Stowe Boyd - one of our leading thinkers on the impact of social tools on society.
I have long admired and respected the work that Stowe Boyd (@stoweboyd) is doing in the Stream. He is someone who really understands the Social Flow that is far more than the individual platforms that represent what we refer to as Social Media or Social Networking.
Stowe's latest line of research is around "Social Cognition." Two observations from his Defrag presentation caught my attention:
"Reynol Junco conducted a study at Lock Haven University that required a group of students to use Twitter as part of their class work: tweets on others’ presentations, or as a social note taking tool when researching. This led to higher social engagement and a GPA increase of one half grade on average. Imagine if they used it in all classes? Or if the whole school used it?"
"Damon Centola has undertaken research that shows that behavioral changes are transmitted more quickly in denser networks. A company or a community where the members in general have more connections to others will be more likely to adopt new behaviors than in more loosely connected networks."
Social Cognition and Health Care
This got me thinking... Does this make a case for Participatory Medicine? Where medical professionals, their patients and fellow sufferers of chronic conditions pool their experiences and knowledge to achieve better outcomes.
The health care Tsunami, where rising costs threaten to bankrupt our nation while fewer and fewer people can afford basic care will force us to rethink how we care for ourselves and each other.
The transformation of health care demands that we become more open. Chronic disease sufferers are already forming networks to share information to help them live with their condition. Each of us needs to establish not just a Personal Health Record but a Life Record. We need to break down the glass walls between the patient and medical professionals. Patients and their personally collected data needs to be put on an equal footing with clinical data. This is where Technology can really play a transformational role.
Transformation Through Life Technology - Not Health Information Technology
Technology and connected platforms offer us an opportunity to gather information at a level of granularity and accuracy that has been impossible, or at least unaffordable, up until now.
Health Information Technology is needed to be able to filter and correlate these enormous volumes of data to look for anomalies and trends that can assist in early diagnosis of conditions.
Presenting this information back to consumers in a form that can be easily understood and acted upon is crucial. Enabling us to share and compare with others will help to reinforce behavior change that leads to continued vitality.
Monday, February 28, 2011
We hold the keys to better health
Jim Marks posted a great article on The Health Care Blog: Health Insurance Doesn't Necessarily Mean Better Health.
The choices we each make have a profound effect on our health. As Jim points out:
"Although genes and medical care are vitally important, we’re increasingly understanding that where we live, learn, work and play affect our health even more. That is clearly what we saw last year when we released the first look at what factors affect health in every county of the nation."
What we eat, the quality of the education we provide for our kids, the housing and community all have an impact. When we couple those factors with a Life Record that helps us track health, habits and well being we have the building blocks for a life of vitality.
More healthcare doesn't automatically equate to better health. We need to pay closer attention to our vital signs and overall well being so that we can seek medical attention when it is appropriate.
Why don't you come along to one of the upcoming HealthCamps to discuss this and other aspects of engaged health.
HealthCamps are taking place in San Diego, CA, New Haven, CT and Tampa, FL:
- HealthCamp San Diego, Sunday March 20th http://www.healthcampsandiego.org
- HealthCampCT@Yale University School of Nursing, Saturday April 2nd http://bit.ly/hcct11tix
- HealthCamp Florida, Saturday April 16th in Tampa http://www.healthcampfl.com
Thursday, February 24, 2011
We need a Life Record. An EMR misses the symptom information that leads us to needing an EMR
If you want to understand the importance of the Patient owning and having automatic access to THEIR health data just take an opportunity to listen to @ReginaHolliday's story of how she lost her husband.
I was at a Social Media event last night and jotted some notes from Regina Holliday's talk. ( http://ekive.blogspot.com/2011/02/tbos-reginaholliday-thoughts-on-patient.html ).
That discussion drove home the fact that we don't know what needs to be in our PHR. We need a life record not a medical record. Then we need tools to be able to evaluate the data points we collect and look for meaning.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
#healthCamp - Pause for Thought:Game-Changing Statistic: 1 in 250 CT Scans can cause Cancer
By BOB WACHTER
Although the medical profession has been harming unlucky patients for centuries, the patient safety movement didn’t take flight until 1999, when the Institute of Medicine published its seminal report, To Err is Human. And that report would have ended up as just another doorstop if not for its estimate that 44,000-98,000 Americans each year die from medical mistakes, the equivalent of a jumbo jet crashing each day.
Come to think of it, the quality movement also gelled after the publication of Beth McGlynn’s 2003 NEJM study, which produced its own statistical blockbuster: American medical care comports with evidence-based practice 54% of the time, a number close enough to a coin flip to be unforgettably disturbing.
These two examples demonstrate the unique power of a memorable statistic to catalyze a movement.
Last month, my colleague Rebecca Smith-Bindman, professor of radiology, epidemiology, and ob/gyn at UCSF and one of the nation’s experts in the risks of radiographs, gave Medical Grand Rounds at UCSF. Her talk was brimming with amazing statistics, but this is the one that took my breath away:
A 20-year old woman who gets an abdominal-pelvic CT scan (i.e., just about any young woman coming to the ED with belly pain) has a 1 in 250 chance of getting cancer from that single scan.
Did that fully register? One CAT scan, which until recently most of us ordered with no more restraint than we exhibit when asking the Starbucks barista for a tall latte, will cause cancer in one out of every 250 patients. Two-hundred fifty: that’s the number of students in my college Bio 101 class. Wow.
This is particularly scary given the remarkable increase in the use of this technology. Get this:
- Three million CT scans were performed in the U.S. in 1980. In 2011, there will be 72 million, an average of 19,500 every day.
- One in five Americans will receive a CT scan in any given year; some experts suggest that at least one-third of those scans are unnecessary.
- Between 2000 and 2005, Medicare spending for imaging studies more than doubled, from $6.6 billion to $13.7 billion, twice the rate of growth of physician fees.
And, although none of these examples has quite the impact of the 1-in-250 statistic, there are lots of other scary risk data, such as:
- The best estimates are that radiation from CT scans causes 29,000 excess cancers each year in the U.S., mostly in women.
- Researchers estimate that 15,000 people will die from the direct effects of the 72 million CT scans performed in 2007 alone.
- A 2004 study found that less than 50 percent of radiologists, and 9 percent of ER docs, were aware that CT scans could increase the subsequent risk of cancer.
- A multiphase abdominal/pelvic CT scan has the same radiation wallop as 500 transcontinental flights, 450 chest radiographs, and 74 mammograms.
- And those airport body scanners you’ve been so worried about? You’d need to be scanned 200,000 times in order to accumulate the radiation that you get from a single CT scan. I’m a 1K United flyer, but I won’t close in on 200,000 scans for the next couple of centuries.
In her grand rounds, Rebecca walked us through the multiple lines of evidence on the risks of radiation from CT scans, particularly those drawn from studies of Japanese A-bomb survivors and individuals who received radiation for both malignant (i.e., lymphoma) and non-malignant (i.e., acne) disease. All pointed to the conclusion that doses in the range of those delivered by CT scans are fully capable of causing cancer.
Remarkably, with all the attention given to regulating food and drugs, the radiation delivered by CT scanners has gone largely unregulated. (If you ask me, I’d rather receive a precise and predictable dose of radiation than of Vitamin D or Azithromycin.) Rebecca found that CT scanners at four Bay area hospitals delivered radiation doses 66% higher than the usually-quoted doses, and that there were staggering variations (up to 13-fold) among different scanners performing precisely the same test. In her talk, she blamed the lax regulations on radiation physicists, fastidious types who have been reluctant to take a stand on maximum radiation doses since they can’t define those doses precisely.
While I’m sure that’s true, I have to believe that some of the reluctance to blow the whistle can be traced to the usual Medical-Industrial Complex: scanning equipment manufacturers, radiologists, and hospitals who have no particular interest in killing this particular egg-laying goose. If you doubt that these forces are at play, witness the billboards for $1000 total body scans that line Florida’s highways (scans that, when performed in healthy people searching for asymptomatic tumors, undoubtedly cause more cancers than they cure). Even now, despite powerful evidence of the risks, there are some in the radiology community who don’t find the science compelling enough to alter their practice. The parallels to the Global Warming debate are eerie, and troubling.
Even if the risks turn out to be less than we fear, most skeptics now agree that we’re causing a lot of cancers, and that many could be prevented if we took a few sensible steps. Manufacturers, hospitals, and radiology facilities should test the radiation exposure of their scanners, with the goal of decreasing the variation and delivering the minimum dose that creates an acceptable image. Ultrasounds should be substituted for CTs when possible, such as in follow-up of patients with documented kidney stones. There is evidence from Mass General that the use of computerized appropriateness protocols can markedly cut down on the number of CT scans, and thus the cancer risk. And, if we need to obtain the patient’s informed consent before transfusing a unit of blood, we should also do so before ordering a CT scan, since the latter is a far riskier procedure.
But changing culture will be more important, and harder, than changing protocols. We physicians have become so accustomed to saying “Get the scan” that we have turned our brains off. Several months ago, I cared for a woman with a painful lumbar compression fracture of unknown duration. We asked the orthopedic surgery service to see her in consultation, and the resident’s recommendation – made without a hint of self-awareness or irony – was that we obtain both a CT and an MRI. I was dumbfounded. Yes, each test can provide slightly different information, but I don’t believe that both were absolutely necessary; nor did a couple of experts I later spoke with. (We ended up getting the MRI only, which produced all the information we needed.) Somehow, we must find a way to break our reflexive radiographic profligacy.
As we struggle as a nation to “bend the cost curve” and we grapple with the nexus of low yield and expensive medicine (the dreaded “R word”), let us all agree that when we have an issue like this – an overused technology that harms or kills thousands of patients each year – we come together to do the right thing. CT scans can be immensely helpful, even miraculous, at times, but there is no question that the right thing is to Just Say No far more often than we ever have before.
Robert Wachter, MD, is widely regarded as a leading figure in the modern patient safety movement. Together with Dr. Lee Goldman, he coined the term “hospitalist” in an influential 1996 essay in The New England Journal of Medicine. His most recent book, Understanding Patient Safety, (McGraw-Hill, 2008) examines the factors that have contributed to what is often described as “an epidemic” facing American hospitals. His posts appear semi-regularly on THCB and on his own blog, Wachter’s World.
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Filed Under: Bob Wachter, Patient Safety
Feb 11, 2011
If you are concerned about your health you need to read this article on the Health Care Blog before you go for your next Hospital or Doctor visit.
I am not saying don't have a CT Scan but instead actively question whether it is really necessary. Whether other alternatives would be as appropriate.
More is not always better and the current Pay for Service model encourages the use of more medications, scans and tests. As patients we need to question the value that we get from each test or prescription we receive. Sometimes the side effects are worse than the symptoms.
Sunday, January 02, 2011
TextWeight Tracks Your Weight Loss Progress, Bugs You Through SMS
For me and many others “lose weight” isn’t just a New Year’s Day resolution, it’s an every single morning one. But yeah, there’s nothing like a crashing boozy halt to a December spent scarfing crappy chocolates and piling on the gravy to make you feel like you should hit the gym, especially after hitting the scales.
A simple service created by Kevin Morrill, textWeight holds you to your New Year’s weight loss vows by sending you a reminder text at 8am every morning, to which you reply (on the honor system) with your weight. textWeight then creates a graph of your weight loss progress, so you can measure every pound lost towards your goal over time.
While sites like FitBit.com, Skinnyo.com, and Myfitnesspal.com all try to solve a similar problem, I’ve yet to see anything so simple focusing on weight loss. And true that 8am wake up text is way harsh, but Morrill is working on time adjustment features as well as other ways of scaling the project.
Users with less fortitude can also stop recieving texts any time by sending “stop” as a reply to any textWeight message or clicking the stop button on the website graph. I just signed up to receive my first annoying text tomorrow. I can’t, um, weight.
A simple solution to the eternal weight loss challenge. Check out http://textweight.com
Friday, September 10, 2010
#hcsd10 Bump your Prescription - Creating the virtuous circle of PHR adoption
This week saw a vibrant HealthCamp San Diego (#HCSD10) go in to the history books as the Inaugural South West Health Un-Conference. HealthCamp San Diego took place the day before the mHealth conference. There are a lot of mHealth events scheduled. It is THE hot topic in healthcare at the moment.
I was just reading Chilmark's review of:
"Is the mHealth Hype Justified?"
One comment caught my eye:
"the story from Stanford Medical School where new med students this year have been issued an iPad in the hopes of replacing mounds of paper that are typically distributed to students for a course over a semester. The students seem to like it and even one of the doctors is quoted as saying towards the end of the article that the iPad is in an ideal form/function factor for a busy physician." [my bolding]
This made me think. We have a brilliant opportunity to create a virtuous circle of ePHR adoption amongst consumers. When the iPad launched a survey showed that 60% of physicians were purchasing or showing an interest in the device.
Imagine the situation where Doctors are using an iPad in their surgery to record the notes from a patient visit. When they issue a prescription the patient could pull out their iPad or smartphone and "bump" to collect the prescription and any notes from the visit. Gone would be the days where the patient forgets most of what they are told within five minutes of walking out of the Doctor's office. The hyperlink truly becomes a prescription.
The technology for this is already available:
QR Codes could handle prescription data - just like airline boarding passes. We used the United Airlines Mobile Boarding Pass on the return trip. No need for paper as we passed through the TSA checkpoints and the boarding gate.
Smartphones can read QR Codes. Therefore a major scanner infrastructure is not essential but can be implemented in high volume locations. This means that adoption at even the smallest pharmacy is possible. The prescription can be "held" at a web site and once used is no longer available. This is exactly how online boarding passes work.
A mobile PHR application can be used to collect the information and store the data securely on Google Health or Microsoft HealthVault where it can be integrated with other data to create a complete view of our health.
The same bump application could be used to securely pass data collected from the patient - from their PHR to the doctor's iPad as part of the consult.
Thursday, September 09, 2010
Reflecting on #hcsd10 - HealthCamp San Diego
- information needs to be actionable
- we need to be able to provide personalized filters to manage the data flow
- devices and sensors need to adapt to users and not force the user to adapt to them
- physicians, clinicians and patients are all mobile and mobile devices need to support them
- physicians are adopting smartphones and iPads rapidly
- we need to build trust between patients and the medical community.
- As consumer telemedicine devices are adopted the Data needs to be collected in the patient's PHR and the medical community needs to become comfortable with using the information that is collected
- when the patient and their PHR are put at the center issues like HIPAA become a lot simpler.
One thing that seemed clear to me as I reflect on HealthCamp San Diego....
There are a lot of great technologists thinking about what mHealth means for better healthcare - but no one has a lock on what that really means.
Now is the time for consumers to voice their opinions by joining this conversation. Both doctors and patients need mobile solutions to provide actionable information, in context (of both time and place) in a way that the information can flow to and from others applications and be openly but securely shared ( under the direction of the patient - or their nominee) in a trusted relationship that leads to better outcomes for the patient.
Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
How Location Services Could Impact Health Care
I showed my dental hygienist who else was checked-in there on Foursquare last time I went to the dentist's office and she was quite taken aback. But we consumers willingly shared our presence at and feedback about that medical facility. That's only the beginning of what's likely to happen.
If health insurance agencies track your location and charge you more for insurance, you're probably not going to appreciate that. There are some possible upsides to the intersection of location and health care, however.
For the Patient
"I would love to see HospitalCompare.com and Health and Human Services (HHS) data mashed up with mobile location apps for health care consumers," says Brian Ahier, Health IT Evangelist at Mid Columbia Medical Center in the Dalles, Oregon. "Helping me find the best pediatrican or orthopedic surgeon would be a great application. And once I'm there, I want to want to lodge a positive or negative complaint on the same service."
"This is all about is the patient," argues Mark Scrimshire, founder of the HealthCamp movement of healthcare unconferences around the world and an employee at a large healthcare payment corporation in the US.
"The one person who is not by their computer during a medical transaction is the patient. They are in the hospital or in the pharmacy. As smartphones take off, there will be tremendous potential for really suplementing the patient and bringing them data that's relevant. Location services could recognize that you are going into a pharmacy, for example, and remind you what your prescriptions are and of anything you needed to talk to your pharmacist about regarding those prescriptions."When you walk into the doctor's office, your smartphone should configure your data and prompt you to transmit your health measurements from home quickly and easily, because it knows where you are. I think there's a lot of potential for augmentation of the patient to let them monitor their own health. That will happen through a wide variety of sensors and location is one important factor that will provide context for that sensor data. 'Blood pressure up? Well, he was at work again.'"
Scrimshire also sees location data being served up to Augmented Reality style apps to help patients navigate their way through the maze-like halls of big hospitals - and providing the kind of in-home tracking that would help the elderly stay in place, instead of being institutionalized.
"Putting a few thousand dollars of monitoring equipment into a home, if it prevents someone from visiting an emergency room, it pays for itself with the avoidance of one visit," he argues.
These kinds of strategies may be less far-fetched than they seem. Medical providers are already offering Google Maps of the best facilities to seek appropriate care. A University Medical Center in Holland has even built an emergency Augmented Reality display that allows you to look through your mobile phone's camera view and locate the nearest automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) located in a public place.
For the Doctor
There are already systems in place in many hospitals to track medical equipment, but what about tracking the medical professionals themselves?
Brian Ahier works in the same small Oregon town where Google recently built a big data center, The Dalles. Earlier this year Google gave the town a grant to build a free city-wide wifi network. Wifi is just one of several ways that the locations of mobile devices can be tracked.
"If there's an emergency and we need to call up all hands on deck, it would be really handy to be able to pull up a map and see where everyone is," Ahier says. "It would need to be secure, and probably for people who are on call only. It would have to be an opt-in situation by the physician."
Inside the hospital, location data could prove very useful in tracking updates from devices located in various parts of the institution as well.
"At some of the HealthCamps there have been conversations about secure Twitter-like conversations in a hospital environment, even between devices," Mark Scrimshire says.
"Imagine if every bed and device could send and recieve Twitter-like messages. Imagine if you come onto duty and you get the feed of all the updates from all the patients and devices."Because of the life or death nature of the industry, it doesn't move that quickly and thus hasn't adopted technology like this. 'Meaningful use' in healthcare right now is about whole-record interoperability, this would be about real-time mashing together of data feeds from different devices and building filters and context. If a patient has a device on them, where are they and how does that relate to other things you're tracking? That makes for better management of the patient. Is a health care provider doing something out of sequence? Location becomes a factor that helps to add context to all these things we could monitor."
Obstacles to the Vision
Some location technologies will likely impact health care sooner than others. There are obstacles to the kind of future that Ahier and Scrimshaw describe. Ahier, for example, says that GPS signals on phones vary too much in accuracy today. And the iPhone is too proprietary for many corporations to build on top of. "Almost all the doctors have iPhones, too," he says. "Even if we give them BlackBerries, they go out and buy their own iPhones."
"Ultimately, I think we're going to need to be platform independent, even device independent," Ahier argues. "We're going to need to be able to use an Ubuntu netbook, an iPad, etc. Our EHR (electronic health records) are going to have to run on all those."
Scrimshaw believes that location technology providers in healthcare will go Google's route and build HTML5 mobile web apps, which nearly every smartphone on the market will soon support.
Scrimshaw believes that the bigger issues are cultural. "The whole industry is very conservative because of privacy," he says.
"HIPAA [the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996] is used as an excuse not to share, but the P is for portability. The big trap door is that we as patients can demand our data, people may want to charge us for us, but our information is our currency. We can decide when and with whom we want to share it."Security is going to be the issue the industry is going to through up as an excuse to not do anything. It's been a minefield to get quality data published about doctors and hospitals, it's a minefield to go through. The healthcare industry is still one where there's a lot of advantage to a lack of transparency. You don't realize you could save $200 by going down the road for the same treatment because the information isn't available.
"But some trends are coming together, in part because of the recession. Employers are putting more of the responsibility for paying for health care on the shoulders of employees, through high-deductible insurance plans, for example. When they start feeling the cost more, then they start asking questions and asking if there are other steps they can take. When the onus is put on the consumer, you'll see them demand a change in the healthcare industry. The consumer can demand their information and be more on par with the physician and make decisions. Then you'll start to see the innovators really coming into the picture."
Will location data be a major disruption of the balance of power between the various stakeholders in the healthcare industry? Will it make shopping for health services, or staying healthy, an easier casual activity for more and more people with smartphones?
Will doctors and medical devices be instrumented, tracked, analyzed and more effectively managed to reduce cost and improve the quality of care?
These visions of location-based health care may be a ways off, but they could also be fast approaching. Just today the FCC and the FDA signed an agreement to jointly develop technical standards for wireless-enabled medical devices and services. Location technology and healthcare could come together sooner than we might expect.
Fascinating discussion with Marshall Kirkpatrick. WE haven't even scratched the surface of Location Based Services in HealthCare.
Friday, July 23, 2010
#health2stat Q and A
Hipaa has made care mechanical. Is privacy concerns eroding our dignity. Access - don't under estimate the power of text messages. That is why twitter is so powerful it bridges the gap between the simple cell phone and the power of the Internet Open.gov: The triple - subject predicate value. The smallest unit on the data web.
Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone
#health2stat
@reginaholliday is here before her exhibition next week at 1000 Potomac ace, nw suite 125 presented by Clinovations . Along with @tedeytan Louise lang will be signing her book - connected for health
Check out the health2.0 developer challenge - http://vimeo.com/13440898 First up - george Thomas - data.gov REST is the architecture of the web. Your web site is your API.Web + data = data web Vocabularies can be metadata Activity streams can enhance data quality @elzeig American college of cardiology - cardiosource.com
Built a social platform for cardiology Lots of frustration when launched. What was learned:
Be ready to raping quickly and publicly Be willing to make changes
Comments are effective part of the community Groups can be effective for communication @chrisboyer - innovahealth
Driving transformational change in a hospital system through a digital strategy Communities want to be conversed with. Conventional "marketing" is flat People don't care about hospitals until they are sick Marketing is all about the message, the audience and the channel Messages must be on pint, ongoing and saturated Digital communications provides the channel Do. Teach. Show. Demonstrate. Digital is absolutely measurable. @philbaumann Gettag.mobi Health is social We have only seen the tip of the iceberg in social media Nurses and physicians should lead social media discussion. It is leading ideological change Nurses are the Jedi knight of the medical industry
Twitter technology is a critical new technology. Expect to see machine interaction bass on these concepts
@tedeytan and @reginaholliday - focus on the patient story Kaiser is part of the innovation learning network @healthcareiln Without the patient story we don't understand the why? Of health care Kaiser 3m registered members online2.5m emails in first quarter 2010 sent to doctors. 43% sign on more than 5 times in q1 2010. Medical advocacy mural project - change the face of healthcare I'm speechless - the most moving five minutes. @reginaholliday WILL change the face of healthcare All of us need to demand "give us our dammed data!"
Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone
Monday, May 03, 2010
Catching up on Health Care
Be warned! A slew of reports are about to get posted. Then I may go quiet for about a week. Then it will be time for HealthCampRDU.
HealthCampRDU - May 13-14th, Durham, NC
Yes. thanks to the Foundation Sponsorship of BlueCross BlueShield North Carolina the next HealthCamp is HealthCampRDU being held in Durham, NC on May 14th. I am planning to be there and you can be too!
You can still sign up for the event. Go to http://healthcamprdu.eventbrite.com.
You can check out more about the event at http://healthcamprdu.org. If you are planning to attend then make sure you arrive early Thursday evening, May 13th. There is a pre-event meeting. Details can be found on http://healthcamprdu.org and your $25 entry fee to HealthCampRDU covers the May 13th meeting too!
HealthCampDC
Finally, I had hoped to organize a HealthCampDC to coincide with Health 2.0 goes to Washington. The Health 2.0 event takes place on Monday June 7th. Unfortunately, I have been unable to secure a facility for June 8th in Washington DC in order to host HealthCampDC. If anyone has a suitable venue (we need a large meeting room and a group of smaller meeting rooms with Internet access) please let me know.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Getting a Grip on Time and Being Healthy Too
Saturday, October 24, 2009
#HCMN HealthCamp Minnesota Kicks in to Gear
Bright and early on Saturday October 24th HealthCampMinnesota kicks off. A massive Thank You has to go to Albert Maruggi (@albertmaruggi) for organizing the event. This will be a slightly different HealthCamp Event. It will follow a similar model that was used at HealthCampNash earlier this year.
Albert has arranged a fascinating set of speakers to lead a series of panels. The objective is to stimulate discussion around HealthCare Delivery, Payments and Medical Devices. So much is up in the air as Washington debates Health Care Reform that these three themes will no doubt intersect during the camp.
One of the leading lights in Health Care Social Media - Lee Aase (@leeAase) is kicking off HealthCampMN. I am thrilled to finally meet Lee. You can follow the Twitter feed for the event using CoverItLive - embedded below - or catch the #hcmn search stream.
If you are planning to be at HealthCampMn you can contribute to the day by registering on the Wiki and updating it with your ideas and contributions. Post links to your blogs, photos and video streams. The Wiki can be reached via a bit.ly short url: http://bit.ly/hcmn_w.
Now, just because there are a series of panels arranged for this HealthCamp don't think you can just sit back passively. We want you to join in. Test the panel, ask the tough questions. Ask a question even if it seems like a dumb one. We all have different perspectives and the value of HealthCamp is in bringing those perspectives and experiences together, sharing and learning together. HealthCampMn is very much "on the record" - Take photos, capture video, blog and tweet about it. Use the #hcmn hashtag when you post content to Flickr, YouTube and elsewhere.
If there are issues that you haven't seen addressed then stay after lunch and we can create discussion groups on the fly - in true HealthCamp style.
HealthCamp is your day. Dive in. Get engaged. You are a participant and not just an attendee. Most of all - have fun. We want you to come away energized.
If you can't be there then check out the Intro to HealthCampMn on YouTube.
Finally don't forget. If you want to run a HealthCamp there are resources available at http://healthca.mp to help you do that. Or drop a comment here. I am always happy to instigate a new Healthcamp that will spread the word about Participatory Medicine.


Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Health 2.0 Conference builds on the HealthCamp Vibe
Yesterday saw 230 people from amongst the best innovators in Health Care attend HealthCampSFBay at Kaiser's Innovation Center in San Leandro, CA.
Today sees the Health 2.0 Conference kick off. The Hashtag for the event is #health2con. I am capturing the tweets using CoverItLive. Check out the feed below:
Monday, October 05, 2009
HealthCampSFBay kicks off the Health 2.0 week in San Francisco
HealthCampSFBay kicks off this morning at the Kaiser Garfield Innovation Center in San Leandro, CA.
220 of the great innovators in HealthCare are coming together to Accelerate HealthCare.
If you can't be there you can follow the event at http://bit.ly/hcsfbay_w or here via CoverItLive:
If you are following on Twitter look for the hashtag #hcsfbay
Friday, October 02, 2009
The Future of HealthCamp is up to al of us
Why do I say that?
Because HealthCamp is about the participants. Every HealthCamp is different. My role is one of Chief Instigator. I am here to encourage others to set about running a HealthCamp for themselves.
My next objective is to create the HealthCa.mp Foundation that can act as a catalyst for Health Camps around the world. With that objective in mind I want to see HealthCamps spring up in different communities.
The essence of HealthCamp is to bring together people from different backgrounds and with different experiences. These different perspectives bring different approaches and different insights to the major challenges we face in health care.
The challenges we face in Health Care, regardless of where we are in the world, are too complex, too enormous for any single entity to tackle alone.
When it comes down to it each and every one of us has to step up and be accountable for their part in addressing the challenges. That is why at every HealthCamp I lay down a challenge by asking "What can YOU do?"
Many of the chronic health issues we face can be traced back to lifestyle choices that we each make. Therefore we each have the power to create change. Simply being more aware of our own health and making responsible microchoices about nutrition and exercise can make a life long difference in our vitality.
....Sent from my iPhone
Posted via email from ekivemark's posterous