found on the net, news & gossip, positive patterns, pt/doc co-care, reforming hc, Why PM

Society’s ICSI keynote makes front page of Star-Tribune

The front page of Friday’s Minneapolis Star Tribune has  coverage of the keynote address I was privileged to deliver on May 5 at the 13th Annual Colloquium of ICSI (Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement) and IHI (Institute for Healthcare Improvement). The article included mention of the Society for Participatory Medicine. ICSI (pronounced “icksy”) is not [...]

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e-patient stories, key people

Participant-Entrepreneurs: Innovating Toward Better Health

Nikolai Kirienko, Crohnology.MD Project Director, is setting a new standard for transparency in research and innovation as he blogs about his work with Project HealthDesign: On days where I could have benefited from the feedback of [Observations of Daily Living] the most, I was the least likely to be recording them. Why? On the worst [...]

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demographics, research issues

Frequently Asked (But Unanswered) Questions About E-patients

As I’ve written before, I love questions. It’s an honor to be handed someone’s nascent idea and to help them shape it (which is what I think a question really is). But this time I’m asking for YOUR input. These excellent questions were sent to me by Liav Hertsman and his colleagues at Tel Aviv [...]

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hc's problem list, policy issues, pt/doc co-care, pts as teachers, reforming hc, trends & principles, Why PM

Patient-centered care: coordination and putting the compliance shoe on the clinician’s foot

The new definition of participatory medicine at the Society’s website notes that patients “shift from being mere passengers to responsible drivers of their health, and … providers encourage and value them as full partners.” As with any collaboration, this must include a hefty dose of listening by both parties. I’ve just returned from an extraordinary [...]

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general

“Gimme my damn data!” The stage is being set to enable patient-driven disruptive innovation.

This is an essay I (mostly) wrote April 28 on Vince Kuraitis’s e-Care Management Blog, part of his series with David Kibbe MD about the Federal EMR incentives, titled “Is HITECH Working?” The series is, in my opinion, the most useful update I’ve seen on this complex and vital aspect of the future of healthcare. [...]

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policy issues, trends & principles

The Power of Data and the Power of One

I am struck, once again, by the power of data and the power of one. Carlos Rizo, Chief Imagineer of the Health Strategy Innovation Cell, posted this very intriguing tweet on May 2: The power of open data: To find problems in complicated environments, and possibly even to prevent them from emerging. Clicking through, I [...]

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medical records, policy issues

Health Geek Radio: Adam Bosworth’s Straight Talk Express

Adam Bosworth of Keas delivered quite a lecture yesterday at the Alliance for Healthcare Foundation. He talks about how Americans don’t really like data (but they need it), why “frugal innovation” is the best path for start-ups, how e-Patient Dave shook up the EHR world, why health privacy legislation would kill patient-driven research, and why [...]

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patient networks, policy issues, positive patterns

The Decision Tree: How Better Health Can Scale

“The internet was created to connect people and groups. The first step is to share stories. The next step is to share quantitative observations.” “Health care has been locked up in regulatory amber. HIPAA was passed in 1996, almost perfectly timed to cut off health care from the internet. But there is a loophole: to [...]

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