e-Patient Dave

Power to the Patient!

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Speaker
    • Corporate & associations
    • Healthcare
    • Videos
    • Testimonials
  • Author
  • Advisor
  • Schedule
  • Media
    • Recent coverage
    • News coverage 2010-2014
    • Book mentions
    • Press resources
  • About
    • About Dave
    • Boards & Awards
  • Resources
    • Patient Communities
    • For Patients
    • For Providers
    • Speaker Academy
  • Contact

February 19, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: The West Wing, lab coats, and more

West Wing replay: Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said something recently that had Aaron Carroll reflect on the West Wing over on The Incidental Economist blog. “When real life imitates ‘The West Wing,’ Surgeon General edition”

Less is more, health IT edition: On the HL7 Standards blog, Michelle Ronan Noteboom looks at the idea that too much is way too much when it comes to several things, including portals and medical treatment. “When Less Is More in Health IT”

You can get it at Lowe’s: Not hardware, although they do certainly have plenty of that. In this piece on the Health Affairs blog, Bob Ihrie and Alan Spiro take a look at how Lowe’s retooled their employee health insurance coverage with an eye on behavioral economics, trust, and relationship dynamics. “Engaging Health Care Consumers: the Lowe’s Experience”

Tattoo you: I (Casey) have been making the health IT event rounds lately as a patient voice on panels about health tech and patient engagement. Since I took a very out-there step related to my own health data, my appearance in the room can start some interesting conversations. An example, by Jim Tate in the HITECH Answers blog: “Patient Engagement: I Tattoo, Therefore I Am”

Lab coats – yes or no? A meta-analysis of the study data available on patient satisfaction scores and physician attire shows that patients are likely to rate a doctor who’s dressed professionally higher than one who isn’t. What’s your thinking there – would you prefer a tie (which can be an infection vector), or are scrubs OK with you? From Lena Weiner in HealthLeaders Media: “Physicians’ Attire Linked to Patient Satisfaction Rates”

From the This Will Never Get Old desk: A film director and his wife took to YouTube back in 2010 to illustrate the user experience when you’re a patient booking healthcare, setting that illustration in the context of air travel booking. The results were, and are, hilarious. The New Altons on YouTube: “If air travel worked like healthcare“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: Aaron Carroll, Alan Spiro, Bob Ihrie, Health Affairs, health IT, healthcare user experience, HealthLeaders Media, HITECH Answers, HL7 Standards blog, Jim Tate, Lab coats, Lena Weiner, patient engagement, The Incidental Economist, The New Altons, The West Wing, Vivek Murthy Leave a Comment

February 18, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: Sugar high, CEO hackathons, and more

3% is not enough: According to this piece from Modern Healthcare, the security threat revealed by the Anthem breach might not be enough to increase spending on cybersecurity, for healthcare or for anyone else. “Experts doubt Anthem breach will boost security spending”

Sugar high: Dr. Abigail James, a neuroscientist and educator who’s known globally for her thinking on the science of learning, points out the results of a Yale study on energy drinks and school children, and shares some tips for parents on weaning their kids off the sugar/caffeine rush. “Sugar high: It’s REAL”

Marble doesn’t matter? I (Casey) have an admitted admiration for hospitalist MDs, based on my work producing a podcast series for The Hospitalist magazine. This post, from the Society of Hospital Medicine’s Hospital Leader blog, is Dr. Bradley Flansbaum’s take on the results of a Johns Hopkins study on hospital fittings – think Ritz Carlton vs. Quality Inn – and their impact on patient satisfaction scoring on physicians. “If your hospital was the Ritz Carlton, how high would your patients rate you?”

Irish science breakthrough: It’s early days in this study, but preliminary reports show some hope for Alzheimer’s and MS patients from a drug under study in Dublin. It’s called MCC950. We’ll be watching this one. From the Irish Times: “Ireland leads a drug breakthrough in fight against MS, Alzheimer’s”

Data geek hacky sack: Our longtime friend Brian Ahier is a health IT geek extraordinaire. Here’s a profile of his upcoming booth-babe appearance at HIMSS15, which includes his belief that health IT is an evergreen bipartisan issue. And a call to develop a wearable that counts hacky sack kicks. From Healthcare IT News: “Brian Ahier: HIE-vangelist, hacky sack extraordinaire”

Healthcare hackathon for CEOs: This showed up in my Facebook news feed today, and I was fascinated. In Denver, a dedicated man named Tom Higley – a real Renaissance man: attorney, musician, tech entrepreneur – has a very interesting event underway this week, where 10 CEOs will listen to 10 “wicked” healthcare ideas, and then incubate a solution to one of them in 10 days. From the Denver Post: “Sold-out production gives 10 CEOs 10 days to build viable health startup“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: 10:10:10, Abigail James, Bradley Flansbaum, Brian Ahier, cybersecurity, Denver, hackathon, Healthcare IT News, Irish Times, Johns Hopkins, MCC950, Modern Healthcare, patient satisfaction surveys, Tom Higley Leave a Comment

February 17, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: Short stories, mea culpas, and more

Short story, long impact: A haunting, thought-provoking piece of “what if” fiction on The Health Care Blog drives home the point that healthcare comes from human hands, but not necessarily human hands on a keyboard. “Please Choose One”

Privacy for sale: On The Doctor Weighs In, Paul Levy tackles the thorny topic of employer-sponsored health insurance plans offering incentives for “wellness” activities. Are we selling our (privacy) birthrights for what amounts to a mess of pottage? “Selling your right to privacy at $5 a pop”

Mea culpa from on high: From the Hospital Leader blog, the President of the Society of Hospital Medicine, hospitalist Dr. Burke Kealey, takes a look at the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM)’s recent rethinking of its Maintenance of Certification (MOC) rules. It may sound like inside-baseball, but Kealey’s post is very readable, and shows that large professional organizations – like, say, ABIM – who ignore their members’ input do so at their own peril. “We got it wrong. We are sorry.”

Too much of a good thing? If you’ve gone “krazy for kale” you might want to read this, and adjust your intake accordingly. Moderation is a virtue, even when it comes to virtue. From WBUR in Boston: “The Dark Side Of Kale (And How To Eat Around It)”

Patients included, lab edition: There’s a new journal in town. Specifically, a journal about and for patient involvement in medical research. It’s called Research Involvement and Engagement – and it’s an open access journal, meaning no pay-wall. Here’s a post announcing its birth on BioMed Central: “Partnership with patients in a new publication”

Caterpillar races: In a thread on the SPM email listserv, one of our members shared a link to this article with the subject line “the caterpillar is coming,” meaning that the slow roll that is medical practice change might be shifting. In a 2012 research paper re-published this month in Wiley Online Library, a group of researchers share the findings of a study about how a feeling of powerlessness can kill patient engagement before it arrives. “Patients’ engagement in primary care: powerlessness and compounding jeopardy. A qualitative study”

Tongue in cheek: We found a new (to us) site/blog, Life in the Fast Lane, that has a great sense of the absurd in medicine, along with some great content on emergency and critical care. Here’s some satire from their archives: “Reducing the budgetary burden of disease“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: Burke Kealey, Hospitalist Leader blog, Life in the fast lane, patient driven research, patient engagement, Paul Levy, satire, The Doctor Weighs In, The Health Care Blog, WBUR Leave a Comment

February 16, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: Data passports, narrow networks, and more

Data passports: In the absence of health IT interoperability, some systems have started using “patient passports” for complex cases. It’s a start. Maybe next, patient passports for all? Here’s a Wall Street Journal piece that tells the story: “Patient ‘Passports’ Make Sure People With Complex Cases Are Heard”

Narrow networks, narrower choices: Affordable insurance plans are no guarantee that you’ll find a provider that takes your plan, and is near your home. As the health insurance industry adds millions of new customers via ACA Marketplace plans, it’s turning out to be a contentious relationship for some folks. The NY Times’ Elisabeth Rosenthal breaks down the issue: “Insured, but Not Covered”

Wisdom of children’s books: The always-worth-reading Susannah Fox thinks that healthcare can learn a lot from one of her favorite children’s books. After reading her post, we’re in agreement with her perspective. “What healthcare can learn from Mike Mulligan and his steam shovel”

Deep dive into Twitter on measles outbreak: Our SPM friend Mark Harmel has a terrific post up on the Symplur blog looking at the Twitter data surrounding the #measlestruth conversation kicked off by Dr. Bryan Vartabedian and Dr. Wendy Sue Swanson to support the idea of vaccinating kids against measles. “Did #MeaslesTruth Create a New Form of Twitter Communication?”

Why Anthem hack is potential horror: A very cautionary piece on NPR about the black market for personal data shows that health IDs, particularly Medicare information, is worth a bundle to the bad guys. The real horror here is the lack of cyber-security sophistication on othe part of healthcare industry IT overlords. “The Black Market for Stolen Health Care Data”

John Oliver on “Last Week Tonight” takes on pharma [WARNING: use headphones if you’re at work!]: The weekly HBO news-comedy host takes on pharma marketing in a very funny, but very NSFW (Not Safe For Work), examination of the marketing juggernaut that is the pharmaceutical industry.  “Marketing to Doctors”

 

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: bryan vartabedian, elisabeth rosenthal, health insurance, john oliver, mike mulligan, npr, NY Times, patient passport, patient safety, pharma marketing, susannah fox, Symplur, twitter, wall street journal, wendy sue swanson Leave a Comment

February 13, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: Geography=health, right-care, and more

Geography is health: Geo-mapping expert Bill Davenhall said that in a TEDMED talk. An interesting neighborhood development in Austin has built in open spaces in a new-urbanism model to foster community health and social interaction. NPR has the story: “Urban Utopia”

Worm in that Austin geo-health apple? The new-urbanism that Austin was aiming at in the above story had a flip-side that revealed underlying racial tensions. Recognizing that, and talking about it, has been eye-opening. Social determinants are a big part of public health. Part 2 of the NPR series on the Mueller neighborhood in Austin: “Utopia Tackles Racial Tensions Under the Surface”

UnitedHealth’s $43 billion bet: “Fee for service” is often blamed for the high cost of US healthcare. Health insurer UnitedHealth has taken a big step away from fee for service, and toward value-based payment to medical providers. From the Wall Street Journal: “UnitedHealth’s $43 Billion Exit from Fee for Service Medicine”

We need to talk: A study in JAMA Oncology concludes that doctors’ views that patients ask for more testing and other care than they need is true in only 1% of cases in cancer care. This piece by Sarah Kliff in Vox breaks down the study’s findings. Seems like doctors and patients have yet more reasons to talk clearly and plainly with each other. “Doctors think lots of patients ask for medicine they don’t need. This study says that’s not true.”

Anthem data hack: A piece in FierceHealthIT says that the FBI is on the case in tracking down the folks behind the Anthem hack, which compromised the personal data of 80 million Anthem customers. There are some hints that it might have been a Chinese hacker group, but no solid leads yet. “Details emerge in Anthem hack”

Friday’s laugh track: From Gomerblog, a visual discourse. “Medical Specialties as Game of Thrones Characters“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: anthem hack, bill davenhall, community health, fee for service, fierce health it, Gomerblog, mueller neighborhood, npr, Sarah Kliff, shared decision, unitedhealth, value-based payment, vox, wall street journal Leave a Comment

February 12, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: People-powered care + 5 more Thursday treats

ICYMI (That’s “in case you missed it”, for the less-hip reader – Dave): Yesterday was a big day in patient liberation. The BMJ (formerly known as the British Medical Journal) devoted an entire edition to people-powered medical care. Here’s Dave’s complete list of the 21 articles(!): “Big BMJ supplement on Patient Centred Care”

Doximity data on doc income: Transparency is spreading across all parts of healthcare, including MD salaries for various specialties across the US, courtesy of Doximity, which calls itself “LinkedIn for Doctors.” The Atlantic has the 411: “What Doctors Make”

Paying for the unaffordable: When you get hit with a healthcare sideswipe, like cancer or a stroke, the costs of care can ramp up pretty quick. If you’re uninsured, or under-insured, paying for care can be a steep hill to climb. Many people in that situation are taking to crowdfunding their medical care, according to this NY Times piece. “Managing Health Costs With Crowdfunding”  (But be sure what you’re donating to is legit – there’s a lot of controversy around “Hannah’s Fund” fraud imitators on GoFundMe. – Dave)

Precision Medicine, Take 1: Moving from “one size fits all” medicine to what I (Casey) call “snowflake medicine” will require some serious DNA assay assembly. This piece from MIT Technology Review talks about Take 1 on that idea. “U.S. to Develop DNA Study of One Million People”

From the “This Should Be Obvious” desk: In a 2007 study published in the journal Health Services Research, the question of patient activation as a motivating factor in self-management of chronic conditions was raised. Their research concluded “maybe” … but we’d love to see a follow-up in the current age of quantified-self tracking. “Do Increases in Patient Activation Result in Improved Self-Management Behaviors?”

Mission Possible: On his “Musings of a Distractible Mind blog,” one of our favorite family doctors, Rob Lamberts, talks about his mission to transform medical practice, with his own practice as ground zero. He doesn’t take insurance, his is a direct-care practice. Think more “country doctor” than “Royal Pains.” Here’s his take on the team he’s working with to drive change at ground level. “The Mission”

 

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: BMJ, crowdfunding, doctor salary, Dr. Rob Lamberts, medical costs, patient activation, precision medicine, self management Leave a Comment

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »

Click to learn about Antidote’s clinical trial search engine:

Subscribe by email

Thanks! Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

News coverage

Click to view article


     

    


     
     
 
   
     
     
    


Archives

Copyright © 2025 e-Patient Dave. All rights reserved.