general

Rare Disease Day 2009

Today is Rare Disease Day 2009. Join us in recognizing the reality of rare disorders and celebrating the beauty in the eyes of children living with rare disease and those who have lost their lives.

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hc's problem list, news & gossip, reforming hc, understanding statistics

MedPage: Negative Data on Seroquel Suppressed by Drug’s Maker

Update January 2011: Be sure to read the comments, which have links to many valuable resources. This item today, from MedPage, underscores the importance of having our eyes open about the human frailties in the research process that our lives can depend on. ORLANDO, Feb. 27 — Newly unsealed court documents suggest that AstraZeneca tried [...]

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key people

Live Blogging the Boston Summit on Transforming Healthcare

Tonight in Boston a series of speakers  are presenting views on the coming transformation of healthcare. (See the web at http://hilforum.com/transforminghealthcare/) Here’s the speaker list—

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e-patient stories

Participatory medicine might have reduced this tragedy

Healthcare is complex. Worse, our healthcare delivery systems are immensely complex. Sometimes things go wrong. The long and difficult story below was submitted to me by a stalwart former member of my kidney cancer group on ACOR.org. I’m reproducing it here with her permission, anonymized; she says she wants the story shared so people understand [...]

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found on the net

Why Technology is No Longer Optional in Public Health

Andre Blackman has posted an important essay about mobile tech’s potential in health care — and the imperative to not miss this cluetrain.

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general

Medpedia: Who gets to say what info is reliable?

Unless you’ve been offline since Wednesday, you know that Medpedia has gone into public beta. I have a concern about the reliability of their model, based on my personal experience and the self-education I’ve been doing for the past year. I want to lay out the concern, my reasons, and a proposal.

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hc's problem list, patient networks, policy issues, positive patterns, reforming hc, trends & principles

Disruption and the healthcare bubble

At the 25th annual TEPR+ conference in Palm Springs on Feb. 2, Alan Greene (DrGreene.com) gave the opening address. It was inspiring – I wish we had a video of it. Too bad so many attendees opted to skip the keynotes and fly into town late! Like, did you guys think the conference was worth [...]

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e-pts resources, patient networks, positive patterns, pt/doc co-care, pts as teachers, reforming hc, trends & principles

A thousand points of pain

Cross-posted from my own blog, and then some E-patients, listen up. We have work to do, work we can do. For the past year I’ve been learning what I can about the American healthcare system. I started this not as an “injured” patient but as someone who benefitted phenomenally from a brilliant cancer treatment. But [...]

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found on the net

Welcome VisibleBody.com

At today’s meeting of the Advisory Board of the Massachusetts Tech Leaders Healthcare Cluster I learned about VisibleBody.com. Astounding visualization tool – like the old plastic Visible Man/Woman models of long ago. Pan, tilt, rotate, zoom. I can see this as a terrific education tool for e-patients. And the potential future applications: I can imagine [...]

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found on the net

Ted Eytan’s Twitterview

“Ask your patients what they use, what they want to use, and how you can be there for them.” — Ted Eytan‘s advice to IT-reluctant health professionals in a Twitterview with Diario Médico.

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