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February 4, 2015 By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment

Daily Digest: Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Happy Wednesday! Or, as we used to call it in the cube farm, Hump Day. Here’s today’s edition of must-reads –

  1. If you listen to the rising tide of discussion about the cost of care, one of the things that’s -supposed- to help curb that hockey stick upward trajectory is technology. So we found it interesting when we tripped over this piece asking if patients have to pay for portal access. I (Casey) say “no” – you? “Should providers charge patients for portal access?“
  2. Man the battle stations – the White House wants Medicare to be able to negotiate pricing with pharma. Since the introduction of Medicare Part D, CMS has been specifically prohibited to negotiate drug pricing with pharmaceutical companies. This could get loud. “Obama administration seeks to negotiate Medicare drug prices“
  3. The Disneyland measles outbreak, suspected to be accelerated by parents who have refused the MMR vaccine for their children, has raised a lot of heated discussion all over everywhere. I (Casey) almost died from measles when I was 9 years old, the same year (1962) that Roald Dahl, the author of “Charlie & the Chocolate Factory” and other classics, lost his 7 year old daughter, Olivia, to measles. In 1988, he begged parents to avoid the heartache he himself had suffered by vaccinating their kids against measles. “Read Roald Dahl’s Powerful Pro-Vaccination Letter (From 1988)“
  4. Speaking of science, both Dave and I are big fans of evidence based medicine. We both believe, and work toward daily, the idea that health and science literacy is a core piece of helping improve patient experience, and patient participation, in the healthcare system. So we’re big fans of the Cochrane Collaboration, which analyzes and publishes scientific evidence aplenty. Here’s their 2014 “greatest hits” page: “Best of the Cochrane Library: 2014 in review“
  5. I (Casey) produce a podcast series for the Society of Hospital Medicine, which gives me the chance to talk to smart hospital clinicians every month. SHM has a great blog, The Hospital Leader, which I recommend to anyone interested in healthcare. Here’s a recent post, pointing up the idea that we all have to think differently, sometimes at the drop of a stethoscope. “The Shield“
  6. From the “how surprising … well, not really” desk, here’s a recent piece by Elisabeth Rosenthal in the New York Times about the snowbirds of Florida, and the growing savviness that retirees are starting to display when it comes to “doctor’s orders.”  “Medical Costs Rise as Retirees Winter in Florida“
  7. And here’s today’s humor break, what we’re calling “Doc Rob vs Dr. Oz, film at 11” – it’s from our good friend Dr. Rob Lamberts’ “Musings of a Distractible Mind” blog, and it tells the story, in tweets, of how Rob responded to the “Dr. Oz’s Inbox” tweetchat (that turned into something of a PR disaster for Oz) last November. “Dr. Rob’s Inbox“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: Cochrane Collaboration, costs of care, elisabeth rosenthal, evidence based medicine, medicare, MMR vaccine, NY Times, participatory medicine, patient portals, pharma, roald dahl, Rob Lamberts, Society for Participatory Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, vaccination Leave a Comment

February 3, 2015 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

Daily Digest: Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Ready, set, DIGEST! Here’s today’s harvest of what we think is worth reading, participatory-medicine division:

  1. Bob Wachter, who is one of the founders of the Society of Hospital Medicine and the hospitalist movement, has a great blog called Wachter’s World. Here’s the latest post, an interview with Andy McAfee, self-tagged “technology optimist” and associate director of the Center for Digital Business at MIT’s Sloan School of Management. It’s a terrific conversation about the intersection of tech and humanity, in medicine and elsewhere. “My Interview with ‘Technology Optimist’ and 2nd Machine Age Coauthor Andy McAfee“
  2. One of our favorite primary care MDs, Dr. Peter Elias, is an SPM member who teaches regularly, and well, on many topics, including using technology tools to enable better doctor-patient communication. In this post, which is essentially a report from the front lines of family practice by someone who knows, Peter tells us why he keeps teaching: to achieve a state of what he calls reflective competence. “I teach to remain a learner“
  3. Leonard Kish is a terrific writer and thinker on health IT. He’s the one who coined the phrase “patient engagement is the blockbuster drug of the 21st century.” Here’s his review of Dr. Eric Topol’s latest book. “8 Takeaways from Topol’s Latest: ‘The Patient Will See You Now: The Future of Medicine is in Your Hands’”
  4. Forbes.com writer Dan Munro put up a provocative post this morning, quoting something said at the Clinton Health Matters Initiative event last week in southern California. The title speaks for itself, and Dan’s take on it is solid. “Founder Of Oscar Health: ‘A Lot Of People In This Industry Are Just Evil’“
  5. NPR Morning Edition had a great piece this morning about a group of patients literally going for a TKO on Parkinson’s. Our MedX friend Sara Riggare has been in what she calls “Parkinson’s fight club” in Portugal recently, so this resonated for us. “Fight Parkinson’s: Exercise May Be The Best Therapy“
  6. For those of us on the healthcare beat, understanding science and research reports is critical. It’s also not easy, which explains why major media outlets get the science, and therefore the story, wrong sometimes. One of the best sources for news analysis on medical and health science stories is Health News Review. They had a funding challenge last year, and had to shut down for a while, but they’re back, and better than ever. Here’s their analysis of recent headlines about a nasal spray that’s targeted at treating Alzheimer’s disease. “Nasal spray shows promise as treatment for Alzheimer’s disease“
  7. And today’s humor is an oldie but goodie from Allie Brosch, the cartoonist behind Hyperbole and a Half. Here, she shares the new pain scale she created, which we think is both (a) funny and (b) more accurate than the pain scale you’ll see in common clinical practice. “Boyfriend Doesn’t Have Ebola. Probably.“

Filed Under: Digests Tagged With: Allie Bosch, Andy McAfee, Bob Wachter, Dan Munro, Eric Topol, Health News Review, Hyperbole and a half, Leonard Kish, NPR Morning Edition, participatory medicine, Peter Elias, Sara Riggare 1 Comment

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