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

December 15, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 5 Comments

The Lost Speech: “Blue Button Plus” developer conference, New York, July 22

Screen grab of shot from YouTube of my talk
Click to view the video on YouTube

This is a quickie post – at long last the video of one of my favorite speeches ever has been unearthed. It was in July in New York, and somehow it got lost, and arrived in my inbox today. (Well, actually, they posted it three months ago but forgot to tell me!)

All’s well that ends well. I just want your help in a BIG push to spread the word about this!  Time’s a-wasting!

The event was a conference conducted by our Department of Health & Human Services to educate and encourage software developers about the “Blue Button Plus” initiative. Because I’m on vacation I’ll leave it to you to google that phrase, which is really important for the future of health IT, and not just in America; this innovation initiative will change what patients and families are capable of.

Unfortunately the video crew that day apparently didn’t realize I was showing slides that might also be part of the presentation (d’oh!) so they only took video of me. So the slides are on a separate site, Slideboom, embedded below, and they’re not synchronized to the video – if you want to see both you’ll need two monitors (ugh) and you’ll need to guess at when to click:
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Government, Health data, Health policy 5 Comments

December 11, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

Interview with Dr. Brian Goldman @NightShiftMD last May

Being interviewed by Brian Goldman MDLast May I spoke at Kingston General Hospital in Kingston, Ontario, a couple of hours northeast of Toronto. They’re a remarkable hospital – five years ago they were a disaster, and under the leadership of CEO Leslee Thompson and her team, they’ve become spectacular. One key example: their staffers’ hand hygiene achievement is now at 96%! (Most hospitals are at 60% or lower, which is the primary cause of hospital acquired infections ending in death.)

A key to KGH’s turnaround was to actively partner with patients they’d previously wronged, and many more patients since; patients are now part of every decision team, even hiring of doctors. As you might imagine, working with them on this event was one of the highlights of my year.

A major treat was meeting two bright stars of Canadian health media, journalist André Picard @PicardOnHealth and Dr. Brian Goldman @NightShiftMD, author of The Night Shift: Real Life in the Heart of the ER and host of the CBC Radio program White Coat, Black Art.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Health policy 1 Comment

November 17, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 9 Comments

Wonderful experience at #AMIA2013

AMIA 2013 standing O
Photo of standing ovation by Gunther Eysenbach

AMIA is the American Medical Informatics Association. I just gave the opening keynote at their annual conference. What a thrill.

“Informatics” has various definitions, but what it boils down to is that it’s everything about the use of I.T. to support clinical activities. Or, as one senior figure told me at dinner last night, “Informatics is computer science that cares about what’s in the data.” (That’s as opposed to computer science where all they do is move the data around, regardless of what’s in it.)

AMIA has a special spot in my heart because my primary physician Dr. Danny Sands is one of the best known figures in it. Walking around with him there, it’s obvious how many people love him.

And, well, these are my people: data geeks! My whole career has been involved one way or another with information technology, and that’s what this association is about.

I had extreme anxiety about this talk, partly because I so wanted to do justice to the many fine people I know there who invited me, partly because it was a huge audience (2,000), but also because I only had one hour, and I had two hours of things to say. So many important things to think about – what to include and what not? And how to put it together in a sequence that builds to a fitting conclusion?

Well, it worked out. A standing ovation (see photo). What an honor, what a thrill.

I’m truly humbled, thrilled and happy to be able to connect this well with an audience that I so admire. Thank you especially to AMIA board member Bonnie Westra, of the U of Minnesota School of Nursing, and John Holmes of the U of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine [see comment below], for initiating this invitation. I was invited to last year’s event but was already booked – so we signed this deal in July 2012.  Couldn’t have worked out better.

A taste of how fun it was is in the Twitter feed below.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events 9 Comments

November 16, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 7 Comments

New speech at @Berci’s Healthcare Social Media course in Budapest

Last week in Budapest I had the thrill at delivering a guest lecture at Semmelweis University, in the Healthcare Social Media course created by 28 year old wizard and “medical futurist” @Berci (Bertalan Meszko). I’ll have more to say later but I want to get the video posted, because friends familiar with my work are saying “Wow!” about this new approach, and I want to hear why, in the comments! Please speak.

Timeline:
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Speaker Academy 7 Comments

November 8, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 5 Comments

Patients in Power conference: eruption in the session on Cross Border Care

I’m extracting this from my previous post into a separate one. As I say below, payment policy isn’t my focus, but what happened in this session is an important example of the difference it makes when patients are running the show and dominate the audience. Don’t jump to conclusions until you get to the end.
____________

Whoa: this subject has caused eruptions among the patients in the audience. After the speakers finished (see below), during Q&A an audience member explained what was really going on, which had not been made clear by the (non-patient) panelists. An audience that had been silent all day became a small roar:

“You are out of touch with reality: look downward, at the lower parts of society!”

“We have a child with a brain tumor – he had surgery … we have no insurance card, and he has complications and now he cannot get surgery!”

Any of this sound familiar in the U.S.? Yes – but you don’t generally hear it said loudly, by people who feel the personal impact, at conferences.

The subject was the European Directive on Cross Border Care, which gives insured patients the right to go get care in another member country. The details of this policy are over my head, but in some ways the arguments are familiar in the U.S.: speakers on the dais gave talks about important new things that are possible, but to the patients in the audience it’s a whole lot of BS, because if you can’t go do what the speakers are talking about, it’s a waste of time: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Government, Health policy 5 Comments

November 8, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

Patients In Power conference: European Charter of Patient Rights

European Charter of Patient RightsLatest update (below) 9:50 a.m. ET. I moved the section on cross-border care into another post.

I wish I had three heads to blog and absorb everything going on at the Patients In Power conference, described in my previous post. (I have immense respect for capable journalists!) But, we do what we can.

The current session is on health reforms, including the work to make equal access to care a reality across borders within Europe. The first speaker was Mariano Votta, Director of Active Citizenship Network. From their About page:

ACN’s mission is to promote and support the construction of the European citizenship as an “active citizenship” which means the exercise of citizens’ powers and responsibilities in policy-making.

Hey, that sounds a lot like the Society for Participatory Medicine’s vision of patients as active partners, with power and responsibility! So it’s no surprise that a primary focus of Active Citizenship is Patients’ Rights. And they have a European Charter of Patients’ Rights, created years ago. Until this trip, I’d been unaware of it! Fascinating:

  1. Right to Preventive Measures [Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Health policy 1 Comment

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • …
  • 22
  • 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.