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April 26, 2016 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Excellent podcast: “Better Health While Aging”

Leslie Kernisan Podcast CoverI have a confession: as e-geeky as I may be, I missed the boat when podcasts got popular, and I never got into them. At last, here’s one that’s worth solving that: Better Health While Aging by Dr. Leslie Kernisan.

I wish I could explain things as clearly as she explains geriatrics – which, as she says in every episode, is “the art and science of adapting healthcare so that it works better for older adults.” (Isn’t that the clearest definition you’ve heard for that word?)

I’ve become addicted – her voice is so clear and friendly; she words things (especially touchy issues) in such a way that you can get the message and hear what you need to hear, without getting clobbered with medicalese or stuff you’d rather not think about.

I’m not giving anyone elder care right now (nor receiving it), but having turned 65 last year I have an interest in my future, and I’ve seen lots of friends and relatives experience elder issues. You know what my thought is about aging? If medicine keeps you from dying, you’re gonna get old! And no better time to learn about it and think about it than right now.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging Leave a Comment

April 19, 2016 By e-Patient Dave 4 Comments

New presentation: “Failure to share data – both ways – makes medicine fall short.”

As healthcare progresses, my business is changing: new speech topics, and more advisory projects. This is a two-part video of a new speech last month, at the New England chapter of HIMSS (the big health IT systems society). Finally clients are agreeing that there’s more to talk about than “Dave’s scary cancer story” – most of this speech is information that didn’t exist when I started giving speeches. Predictions are coming true, so new imperatives emerge.

The videos: (Email subscribers, if you can’t see the videos, click the headline to come online.)

[Read more…]

Filed Under: disruption, Events, Health data, Innovation, patient engagement, public speaking 4 Comments

April 15, 2016 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

Beyond Empowerment: Patients, Paradigms, and Social Movements

It’s time to move beyond empowerment and engagement, and get to the deeper issues.

For 18 months it’s been increasingly clear that the nature of this work – at least mine – has moved beyond surviving cancer (though that’s great), beyond “Gimme my DaM data” (though that’s true). It’s time to examine the core beliefs that hold medicine back from achieving its potential – its mistaken conceptions about what patients can do and should be supported in doing.

So when Susan Carr, editor of the excellent Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare, asked last summer if we should do another piece, I proposed that we pick up where I left off in 2015 as Mayo’s Visiting Professor: let’s examine whether it’s time to formally examine “the paradigm of patient”; to rigorously ask whether establishment medicine’s conception of what “patient” means – especially what patients are capable of, and should be empowered to achieve – needs to be updated. If we get that wrong, then business and science and policy can’t possibly get it right.

The resulting interview is here – they made it their cover story! You can jump to that link, but if you have a moment, I’d like to say more about its background, and why this is important.

Problems in a paradigm are not to be taken lightly.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Culture change, Innovation, Leadership, Medical Education, Science of Pt Engmt 1 Comment

April 12, 2016 By e-Patient Dave 6 Comments

The difficulty of shopping when they hide the facts: that skin cancer RFP in the NY Times

NYTimes Tina Rosenberg clip 4-12-16$5,000-$7,000?  $1200-$1500?  $868?  What should it cost to remove a simple skin cancer? What if you can’t find out?

Long-time readers know that in 2012 I was on high deductible insurance – and I don’t mean Obamacare-style $3,000 deductible, I mean $10,000 deductible. I chose that gladly, because I had laboriously analyzed the five plans available to me. I know insurance is a game of sharing risks, so I analyzed (it took all my Excel skills) and chose.

What happened next is described in a column in today’s NY Times by Tina Rosenberg, Shopping for Health Care: A Fledgling Craft: within months I discovered I had a skin cancer on my face. I became a highly motivated shopper, and quickly discovered nobody could tell me what would be on my bill.

The details are in several skin cancer posts here. But Tina Rosenberg writes about social problems, and I want to draw attention to the nature of this social problem: it withholds power from the person whose health is at stake, and that’s just plain wrong.

Here’s the World Bank’s definition of empowerment, from a January post:
[Read more…]

Filed Under: cost cutting edition, Patients as Consumers 6 Comments

April 11, 2016 By e-Patient Dave 2 Comments

Five years ago: a three-speech three-country earthquake week

Longtime readers know that this has been a long hard road, creating a “market” for a patient voice to speak culture change at health conferences. This is an anniversary week worth noting, on several fronts … it’s the fifth birthday of not just my TED Talk, but two other events that bent my trajectory.

First, the TED Talk – I know you’ve seen it, but here it is anyway. Click it (to boost the view count:-)) or just skip ahead.

Photo: Aad van Vliet (Mirella Boot on Flickr)
Photo: Aad van Vliet (Mirella Boot on Flickr)

Strictly speaking the birthday was a week ago – April 4, 2011. I stepped on stage onto the “big red dot” that TED Talks are famous for, and faced an audience of 900 in a theater with two balconies. The place was historic: Maastricht, where the European Union had been formed 19 years earlier. Fifteen minutes before going on stage I’d handed in my revised slides (modified in the two hours after lunch); not to be outdone on the “last minute” thing, waiting back stage, host Lucien Engelen had just told me “You have to do” the e-Patient Rap, created by Keith Boone (@Motorcycle_Guy). (In the talk when I say “a little improv,” I meant it – it was not planned, not even rehearsed.)

Sixteen minutes later, the talk ended with the chant “Let Patients Help!” With a standing ovation happily in my tummy, I stepped off.

#2: Jerusalem – debating with Israeli scholars

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized 2 Comments

February 9, 2016 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

A MOOC about social media in healthcare: opportunities & challenges

FutureLearn Social Media in Healthcare course screen captureThis post is about a specific course, the concept behind its technology, and what it means for the future of learning. For people who know about MOOCs this will be old news; for people who don’t, I hope this will be enlightening. It’s a big change.

For years I’ve heard about MOOCs – Massive Open Online Courses. As Wikipedia says, “…an online course aimed at unlimited participation and open access via the web.” I first wrote about the idea three weeks ago, in Reusable building blocks: a speech by video Q&A, but I’d never touched a MOOC, until recent months when I got involved with one.

It’s a free course (that’s the “open” part) that ended last month, and will start again in two weeks: Social Media in Healthcare. Specifics:
[Read more…]

Filed Under: e-patient resources, Innovation, Patient-centered tech Leave a Comment

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