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November 8, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 3 Comments

Patients in Power conference: background and live blog

At 2:00 a.m. New York time, a conference started in Athens, Greece: the second annual Patients In Power conference, created by powerhouse cancer patient Kathi Apostolidis. I want the U.S. to know what’s happening here, so the usual Twitter stream won’t do: most of it will be over by the time America’s online. So I’m going to live blog parts, so people can read later. Through the day I’ll blog about it occasionally. Here are the basics:
Patient Created v2

  • Live stream on LiveMedia.Gr (with archive)
  • The Patients In Power website (in Greek and English)
  • Facebook page
  • Twitter account: @PiPGr
  • The #PiPGr Twitter stream on TChat
  • Twitter analytics on Symplur

Later posts here today:

  • European Charter of Patient Rights
  • Eruption in the session on Cross Border Care

Patients more than Included

Patients Included badgeThe badge at left is the symbol of the Patients Included movement, created by Lucien Engelen, director of the Radboud REshape & Innovation Center at Radboud University Medical Center. Its purpose is to put an end to conferences that propose to be for the benefit of patients, without including said patients in the conference.

The best known “all about the patients” conference is Larry Chu’s Medicine X at Stanford: patients are truly at the center, e-patients are advisors to the conference, and the conference subsidizes participation by patients. This conference in Athens goes even further: the organizing committee consists of forty patients  & advocates, and just one academic. Every single aspect of this conference was conceived, designed, planned and prioritized from the patient point of view.

I took the liberty of modifying Lucien’s badge. If his university’s lawyers yell at me we’ll deal with it. :)

Newsletter adSaturday: e-Patient Boot Camp

For more than a year, Kathi has wanted to bring my “e‑Patient Boot Camp” to Athens. This year she made it happen.

Saturday morning we’ll have a 3.5 hour training based on Let Patients Help, with plenty of interaction. (At both the Friday conference and the Saturday boot camp there’s simultaneous translation.) I anticipate assistance from the incredible Martha Hayward of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement – a cancer patient, accomplished health improvement executive and their guru of what they call “Public and Patient Engagement.” She’s speaking today, and I’ve been learning a ton, spending time with her.

And that requires, of course, having the book in the local language:

Greek edition of Let Patients HelpLet Patients Help – in Greek:
“Οι Ασθενείς Μπορούν να Βοηθήσουν”

I love that this movement is getting more momentum from individuals than it’s getting from the whole Society for Participatory Medicine – which I co-chair. (Gotta fix that!) In the Netherlands Lucien Engelen has created a Dutch translation of Let Patients Help, and in Budapest Bertalan Mesko created a Hungarian edition.

For this event, Kathi organized a team of volunteers to translate the book into Greek and get it printed – not in a fancy bound “real book” but in a saddle-stitched booklet. When someone translates the book for self-use, I don’t collect a royalty – what they do with it is up to them. (I just require that the message be translated accurately, so the message isn’t spread incorrectly. And if the book is to be sold at retail, we need to talk.)

This is Let Patients Help “on the hoof.” For real.

I have to say, being at this event is a little bit of a cognitive firehose – this is so different from other conferences, which are either managed for commercial purposes (the sponsors get to speak!) or for the benefit of researchers or some other party. For most such events, getting them to engage with patients is like pulling teeth: “Do we HAVE to? And why do they need financial support?? Most of our speaker don’t.”

Well, that issue doesn’t exist here, because this event was created bypatients. Nobody needs to explain to them how to view healthcare from the patient’s point of view.

Congratulations to Kathi and the large network of volunteers and sponsors she has assembled.

 

Filed Under: Events 3 Comments

October 27, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 2 Comments

Going global: Let Patients Help Europe Tour, Fall 2013

Euro tour map Nov 2013
Map created by www.travellerspoint.com. Fun and free!

Let Patients Help is a successful book, but in the early days of its movement, it was common to hear skeptics say “This is only in America.” Boy was that wrong.

The first massive proof was TEDx Maastricht, the seminal event constructed by Lucien Engelen from Radboud UMC (university medical center) in the Dutch town of Nijmegen. It was such a big deal – the first conference I know of anywhere that was totally focused around patients … so many patients that a blogger Grand Rounds was devoted to videos of the talks patients gave at that event.

It was the first time anyone heard the chant “Let Patients Help” in a TED Talk, and the response has been enormous: almost a half million views so far on TED.com. TED says there’s usually the same number on other sites, so that means almost a million views. Volunteers have added subtitles created in 26 languages, so I’d say it’s not “only in America.”

This fall, Europe goes “e,” big-time, with four events in one month.

In November four events in four European customers will focus on Let Patients Help, all driven by visionaries who are seriously working on patient engagement – in Athens, Budapest, Amsterdam and Brussels.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, Government 2 Comments

October 4, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 14 Comments

Resources from today’s lecture at the World Parkinson’s Congress

Major updates made Sunday 10/6.

Panorama of World Parkinson Congress auditorium

Today I had a rare privilege and challenge: I spoke to a kind of audience I’d never addressed before – the World Parkinson Congress in Montreal. I was one of four speakers in a two hour session “New Views of Managing Parkinson’s Disease”; we each had 25 minutes plus Q&A. Above is a photo I took from the stage – a big hall at the Palais de Congres, with over 2,000 in the room.

Click to visit the book's sale page
Click to visit the book’s sale page

I composed a talk about patient empowerment (in the context of Parkinson’s) based on things I’d learned about the disease community – and, importantly, research issues – from two good friends with the disease, Sara Riggare of Sweden and Perry Cohen of DC. They must have coached me well, because four times I was unexpectedly interrupted by applause. It was webcast, and video of the session should be published in a day or two.

One item I noted in the talk was a brand new, magnificent book [right] that was launched at the conference, conceived, written, edited and produced entirely by patients. In my view this book is the instant exemplar of how patients can define their disease to the world: the experience of getting the diagnosis, exploring treatment options with each other, coping with life with the disease, and much more. It’s a gorgeous, browsable, full color coffee table book – you can jump in anywhere. More on this book later.

Here’s a version of today’s slides, modified to be more understandable without the audio:

World Parkinson’s Congress 2013

View more presentations or Upload your own.

There was enough interest that we added an unscheduled breakout session in a side room – thanks to organizer Eli Pollard for her quick response!

The unplanned session truly had no plan – we started talking and taking notes. In a sense this was an example of a point I make frequently: patients know what patients want to know. It was great to see the fire and hope in the eyes of these patients and caregivers who want so much to define the future on their own terms, given the constraints of the future they own. I took notes as we talked (using the room’s projector) and promised to publish them.
____________

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events 14 Comments

September 25, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 3 Comments

My talk at NCSBN (National Council of State Boards of Nursing)

NCSBN website (click to visit their site)In August I gave one of my most successful speeches ever, at the annual meeting of the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (ncsbn.org). These are the people who do board certification of nurses and, when necessary, look into cases where discipline may be needed. In short, these are people for whom quality makes all the difference in the world; it is their work.

I was inspired and thrilled to be invited to speak to them. As always, we had a lengthy call to plan the focus and objectives of this talk. Here’s the video – I’m even more thrilled that they hired such a great video company! Multiple cameras, high quality slide rendering, and terrific editing. Thank you!

The video doesn’t show it, but the audience gave a standing ovation. It’s a wonderful feeling to connect with people at that level.

If you can’t see the video, click here.

Evaluations:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Events, public speaking 3 Comments

September 23, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 6 Comments

14 minute “Show Opener” speech at the Consumer Health IT Summit last week

Slide from my talk (click to watch the video)Who says the gummint can’t move fast??  Last Monday morning I gave the opening talk in Washington for the Consumer Health IT Summit, and holy cow, the video’s already been edited and is live on YouTube!

If you can’t see the video below, click the screen capture at right to view it on YouTube.

(Caution – them same gummint people live with policies that didn’t allow me to plug in my computer; we had to use theirs, which of course hasn’t been upgraded from PowerPoint 2007 yet. The contractors assured me my slides would work fine, and after a half hour of emergency surgery they mostly did, except the one where the text came out black and the slides that kept changing spontaneously – always fun for a speaker to deal with. But the message got across!)

This is really important, folks! Speak up! Get involved!

There are rules and laws and regulations that say you DO get to access your data, and it’s a Federal civil rights violation for a provider to tell you no. And it’s really good that our data will get liberated, because that means innovators can create software and gadgets to do fancy and useful things with your data. And your kids’ data. And your elders’, and your friends’.

Educate yourself – “free your mind,” as we said in the Sixties. The new era is coming – let patients help! And to do that, you gotta have copies of what your doctors see. Get involved.

Filed Under: Events, Government, Health data, Health policy, patient engagement 6 Comments

September 17, 2013 By e-Patient Dave 3 Comments

“Better Health: Everyone’s Responsibility” – resources for today’s conference

Patients Included badge
Click to view Lucien Engelen’s “Patients Included” story on LinkedIn

Conference logoFor years we in the participatory medicine movement have been talking about the need to involve patients in all aspects of medicine – not just our own cases but even in the design of the whole system. The movement is exemplified by the Patients Included badge at right, created by Dutch health visionary Lucien Engelen.

Today I’m speaking at a truly extraordinary healthcare event in Hartford – it’s completely about, for, and aimed at  the public – us ordinary people:

  • The title is right on target: “Better Health: Everyone’s Responsibility”
  • The event is scheduled from 12:45-8, so people only have to take a half day off work
  • Admission is $35 including dinner(!!), or $10 without(!!)

Over 500 local people (aka patients) are attending. For more, see the event’s website.

In my talk I’ll mention various resources participants can look up, to learn more about the movement and boost their own abilities.  I’m going to publish this post now, and through the day I’ll add various things as they come to mind.

BIG thanks to the event’s organizers, the CT Partners for Health partnership and its founder Qualidigm. Here are some starter links: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Events 3 Comments

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