reforming hc

 

hc's problem list, reforming hc, social media

What’s your health care dream?

  #whatifhc in #TheWalkingGallery   Note: This is two posts in one — scroll down to read Regina Holliday’s point of view. From Susannah Fox: For me, Twitter is a free-wheeling space where people dance with ideas. Anyone is welcome to jump into the spotlight and take a twirl. That’s how I see hashtags – [...]

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found on the net, reforming hc

TED talk on doctors’ mistakes

TED.com has posted physician Brian Goldman’s very engaging presentation from November 2011, “Doctors make mistakes: can we talk about that?” Goldman discusses the impossibly high expectations we all have of doctors — doctors themselves especially — and calls for a reality check. Using personal anecdotes, he argues that medical culture must change to allow physicians [...]

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policy issues, reforming hc

“That means there is hope” – Atul Gawande at #CISummit

Edits made in the discussion at bottom, 1/27. Quick post from the media table at today’s Medicare Innovation Summit: Deservedly famed surgeon & author Atul Gawande just put together a bunch of thoughts into a potent summary. Paraphrasing from memory: There is a bell curve for quality – a wide gap between the best care [...]

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hc's problem list, medical records, reforming hc

Medical Devices: Another take on “We want Access to our Damm Data”

Another potent guest post by SPM member Alexandra Albin, @MsAxolotl. If this doesn’t give you a sense of who is “the ultimate stakeholder” in health matters, nothing will. Remember, “patient” is not a third person word. Your time will come. A conversation on the SPM listserve was started by Joleen Chambers, @JjrkCh, a patient advocate [...]

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positive patterns, pt/doc co-care, reforming hc, Why PM

MIT Media Lab’s Health & Wellness 2012: ten day innovation fest, six us-centered projects

Updated 9:38pm ET – fixed many broken links :-/ I’m spending today (ONLY today, unfortunately) at the MIT Media Lab’s third annual Health & Wellness Innovation event.  It’s a two week competition – six teams pursuing some terrific ideas for the most patient-friendly health innovations I’ve ever heard of. Or close to it. I’ll write [...]

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e-pts resources, found on the net, reforming hc

Pauline Chen: Getting Patients to Take Charge of Their Health

Quick note as I run to the airport – Last May we reported on a study in process at Emory University about whether a “safety-net” (poor) population would engage with a personal health record. The preliminary results in that poster showed that what predicted patient performance was not how poor they were, nor how bad [...]

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medical records, practice variation, pts as teachers, reforming hc, shared decision making, Why PM

HBR blog: “The trouble with treating patients as consumers”

Edited a few minutes after the original post. Over on the Harvard Business Review blog a post yesterday is stirring up discussion. I hope well-informed SPM members can help shed some light in the comments there, citing as many specifics as you can. (As I compiled the paste-ins for this post, I was struck again [...]

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JoPM, others' e-patient stories, positive patterns, pt/doc co-care, reforming hc

A physician who really understands patient-centered care

The Journal of Participatory Medicine has just published “The Patient Will See You Now,” a thought-provoking and rather moving narrative by John Krueger, MD. In telling his own story of becoming and maturing as a physician, the author persuasively argues that the key to practicing patient-centered medicine is devoting time to listen to patients’ stories [...]

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general, hc's problem list, medical records, policy issues, reforming hc, understanding statistics

Fred Trotter: Data, damn data, and statistics

Why does this blog use the word “damn” so often? A search produces a whopping 38 hits, such as: Fools! Damn fools! And Medical Science (Right, Santa??) Atlantic: Lies, Damned Lies, and Medical Science “Gimme my damn data!” The stage is being set to enable patient-driven disruptive innovation Lies, Damn Lies And Statistics: Collective Statistical [...]

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medical records, policy issues, pt/doc co-care, reforming hc, shared decision making, Why PM

Alert: Lawrence Weed, father of the Problem Oriented Medical Record, looks ahead

The excellent ICMCC daily newsletter just alerted me to this item from Permanente Journal: Interview with Lawrence Weed, MD – The Father of the Problem-Oriented Medical Record Looks Ahead. I hope to absorb it in the next day or two, and I invite people who know this history to do the same. It’s deep, and it’s connected [...]

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