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February 27, 2014 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

A Man of the Year in “Shapers & Influencers”? I’ll take it…

My H.I.T. Men of the Year awardMonday night at the gigantic (37,000 people) HIMSS conference in Orlando (Health Information Management Systems Society), Healthcare IT News presented its 5th annual “H.I.T. Men & Women of the Year” awards. I was one of the nine nominees in the “Shapers & Influencers” category, and I was thrilled to learn that I was one of the three winners! Announcement and photo here.

Even better, famed art activist Regina Holliday was another. So our Society for Participatory Medicine nearly swept the category. That’s a huge acknowledgement in a Society that still barely knows patients exist – not a single patient was invited to speak in the big hall.

My thanks to Healthcare IT News, and to emids, the company who founded the award.

Filed Under: Events, Uncategorized Leave a Comment

February 26, 2014 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Let Patients Help – now available in Spanish: “¡Dejad que los pacientes ayuden!”

513d+SE7-hL._I’m thrilled to announce that my book Let Patients Help is now available for sale, in paperback or Kindle, in Spanish!

The project was managed by Luis Fernandez Luque (@LuisLuque), longtime member of the Society for Participatory Medicine and organizer of my tour of the northeast part of Spain two years ago. This man sees the future and makes things happen.

  • Print edition, on Amazon’s CreateSpace self publishing site
  • Kindle edition, on Amazon

Please spread the word to the whole Spanish speaking world. ¡Dejad que los pacientes ayuden!

Thanks too to the other team members whose work made this possible:
Jaime Cubero Guerrero (Editor)
Miguel Tovar (Editor)
Elena Sainz (Editor)
Patrick Partridge (Translator)

 

Filed Under: books Leave a Comment

February 24, 2014 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

“Patient Engagement in Health IT” is live – my first professional C.E. course

screen capture of course web page
Click to visit the course web page

After a year of work in partnership with the University of Minnesota School of Nursing, I’m thrilled to announce that my first commercial, professional continuing education course is live:

Patient Engagement
in Health Information

An online C.N.E. course
at the University of Minnesota
School of Nursing

Register here.

From the course web page:

Target Audience:
Healthcare team members interested in learning to plan for and implement supportive actions for patient engagement and activation through the use of health information technology (IT).

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

February 23, 2014 By e-Patient Dave 8 Comments

Do you know what’s in YOUR (health) wallet??

VeHU audience poll question resultsI’m at the gigantic HIMSS health IT conference in Orlando, in the consumer pre-conference. In my opening talk I briefly mentioned something I’ve said for years:

Have you looked in your chart? Your medical record? Do you know for a fact that there are no errors in it?

Most audiences appear intrigued and thoughtful at this. But ha ha ha, at HIMSS (people who work in health IT), on Twitter there are two interesting reactions:

  • Several different people tweeted it, showing unusual interest in it, and more than a dozen retweeted those
  • And, a whole bunch of people are saying “Who says?? What’s the source??” 

How fascinating. Well, here’s what I know about it.

  • 18 months ago I spoke at the Veterans eHealth University, a virtual university for people who work in the VA (veterans’ administration) health system. They asked me to submit some interactive audience response questions.
  • One was to ask the audience if they had checked their own record. The results are in the slide above. (Sorry about the typos – that’s how the A/V guys typed it into the computer.) Results:
    • 50 / 66 (76%) said no, they’d never looked. (Have you?)
    • Of the 16 who had looked:
      • 5 (31%) weren’t sure whether there were errors.
      • Of the 11 who were sure:
        • 7 found mistakes (64%)
        • 4 found the record was perfect (36%)

So, roughly: of those who had checked, about 2/3 found mistakes: missing allergies, wrong medications, wrong diagnoses, etc.

Since then, depending on the audience, I’ve asked this of other audiences. Every time of those who’ve checked, about 2/3 found errors. Every time.

This is not a peer reviewed journal article.  I’d love to see one! I also encourage all health IT speakers to ask their own audiences. Maybe mine aren’t typical, somehow.

And by the way – if you’re skeptical, do you know if your record contains everything doctors and nurses should know about you, and doesn’t contain errors?

As always, discussion is welcome!

It’s like the old Capital One commercials – do you know “What’s in your wallet?”

——————-

Updates added later:

  • At the British Columbia Patient Safety & Quality Council conference later that week, in a post-keynote workshop, I asked the room about this:
    • Of more than 100 in the room, eight had examined their entire records.
    • Of those, six had looked errors, and two had found them completely accurate.

 

Filed Under: Health data 8 Comments

February 21, 2014 By e-Patient Dave 2 Comments

High Reliability Organizing: new conference next month

hro_bannerRegular readers know that in everyone’s efforts to improve health and care, I’m fascinated by work in other sectors too, because a lot of the ways that medicine falls short of its potential have been solved in other industries.  Our failure to use those methods (too often) is not just a disservice to patients – it’s a disservice to clinicians who work hard, too.

My friend Jim Conway, a titan in the world of safety and quality improvement (LinkedIn), told me about a new conference that may interest you too, if you work in improving quality. He’s keynoting.  I’ll be attending even though I’m not speaking, because anything that semi-retired Conway will focus attention on is good enough for me. As a small new event they’re looking for other sponsors, too, in addition to the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations and Dow Chemical:

Institute for High Reliability Organizing

  • March 28-30, Fort Worth, hosted by The University of North Texas Health Science Center
  • Organization website here.
  • Event website here.
  • Registration here.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events 2 Comments

February 19, 2014 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

My slides for Brookings Institution webcast

Updated at noon – fixed missing links

Event: “Involving Clinicians in Payment and Delivery Reform: The Role of Social Media and MOOCs.” The event’s website is here and the Twitter archive on Symplur is here. I’m on a panel 11-11:45 and they can’t display slides, so I’m posting some here, selected based on what I’ve heard in the previous panels. Social media busts through boundaries!

 

e-Patient dave at Brookings Merkin Feb 2014 from e-Patient Dave deBronkart

Filed Under: Events, Government, Health policy, Uncategorized Leave a Comment

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