Social Media is rapidly becoming an integral part of our lives. Despite the pervasive nature of the communication channel healthcare remains a technology laggard. This presentation will offer insights to help understand why they should join the community,
Patients’ own expectations for technology are growing and they have shared that digital technologies need to become more integral in the care delivery process. In the U.S., nearly half of Americans would opt for online capabilities vs. handling over the phone, such as getting lab test results, filling out paperwork ahead of a doctor’s appointment, accessing their medical records, and filling prescriptions. Given the increasing desire for a tech-driven care experience, patients are helping to spur technology adoption by their providers.
As the population ages, technology adoption and information exchange within the long term and post-acute care settings becomes increasingly more important. How can post-acute care agencies overcome challenges of limited resources (financial and workforce) to bring patient care delivery into the 21st century? Patients who take prescription medications for chronic conditions are also feeling the pain from a lack of tech-adoption when their doctors typically don’t offer them access to online condition management tools or make themselves available online or via email for questions. Dr. Van Terheyden will discuss what needs to happen to break down these barriers.
Digital Health Revolution and the Opportunity for Dietitians to Lead Viable Synergy LLC
This is a presentation that was given at the 96th Annual Conference of the Ohio Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics conference on May 18, 2017. During the session we discussed the rise of digital health and its impact and role in health and healthcare delivery. Innovative software, hardware, and communication solutions were described and use cases discussed. Innovative programs and services being provided by dietitians in our region and around the world were highlighted.
Will healthcare be delivered by george jetson in the futureNick van Terheyden
The document discusses how technology will transform healthcare delivery in the future. It describes how data science, sensors, genomics, robotics, and digital connectivity will generate massive amounts of medical and personal health data. This data deluge will drive more personalized, predictive, and preventative forms of care that are delivered both in medical facilities and at home. However, it also notes the challenges of how healthcare providers and patients can effectively manage and utilize all of this new information.
Social media for tracking disease outbreaks–way of the future By.Dr.Mahboob a...Healthcare consultant
Traditional disease surveillance relies on data obtained from doctors, hospitals or laboratories through formal reporting systems. This yields valid and accurate data about emerging outbreaks and the impact of control strategies such as vaccinations. But it’s often not timely. Digital data are now publicly available from many sources. People talk about epidemics on social media using key words such as “fever” and “infection” before they are officially identified.
A surveillance system for detecting outbreaks of Ebola using Twitter, for example, could set geospatial tags for specific locations such as the African continent. It could search for a cluster of terms on the Twittersphere such as “haemorrhage”, “fever”, “virus”, “Ebola”, “Lassa” (an illness that can be confused with Ebola).
A system trying to identify influenza could mine terms that reflect visits to the doctor, purchase of tissues, paracetamol or aspirin from pharmacies, sick leave from work, as well as terms specific to the clinical syndrome of influenza.
eHealth or digital health refers to all health care services that use the internet and online tools. It aims to provide better care at lower costs through patient satisfaction. eHealth encompasses technologies like telemonitoring, mobile health, and connected care. It features informing and educating patients, collecting and analyzing data, enabling communication, and facilitating shared decision making to optimize health care processes and outcomes. eHealth takes many forms through computers, medical devices, apps, and future technologies. It is a broad concept that can start with small, customized online services for patients that provide efficiency while allowing health organizations to learn and develop integrated, multidisciplinary, and participatory care over time.
Access to oral health care services around the world is limited by a lack of universal coverage. The internet and social media can be an important source for patients to access supplementary oral health related information
The document discusses the use of smartphone technology in behavioral health care. It describes how apps can be used for symptom tracking, psychoeducation, and integrating treatment. Examples of apps are provided for various clinical areas like mood disorders, substance abuse, and anxiety. Both pros and cons of using apps are discussed. While apps have potential benefits, issues around quality standards, data security, and privacy need to be addressed. Additional ethical considerations involve setting clear boundaries for client communication.
Patients’ own expectations for technology are growing and they have shared that digital technologies need to become more integral in the care delivery process. In the U.S., nearly half of Americans would opt for online capabilities vs. handling over the phone, such as getting lab test results, filling out paperwork ahead of a doctor’s appointment, accessing their medical records, and filling prescriptions. Given the increasing desire for a tech-driven care experience, patients are helping to spur technology adoption by their providers.
As the population ages, technology adoption and information exchange within the long term and post-acute care settings becomes increasingly more important. How can post-acute care agencies overcome challenges of limited resources (financial and workforce) to bring patient care delivery into the 21st century? Patients who take prescription medications for chronic conditions are also feeling the pain from a lack of tech-adoption when their doctors typically don’t offer them access to online condition management tools or make themselves available online or via email for questions. Dr. Van Terheyden will discuss what needs to happen to break down these barriers.
Digital Health Revolution and the Opportunity for Dietitians to Lead Viable Synergy LLC
This is a presentation that was given at the 96th Annual Conference of the Ohio Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics conference on May 18, 2017. During the session we discussed the rise of digital health and its impact and role in health and healthcare delivery. Innovative software, hardware, and communication solutions were described and use cases discussed. Innovative programs and services being provided by dietitians in our region and around the world were highlighted.
Will healthcare be delivered by george jetson in the futureNick van Terheyden
The document discusses how technology will transform healthcare delivery in the future. It describes how data science, sensors, genomics, robotics, and digital connectivity will generate massive amounts of medical and personal health data. This data deluge will drive more personalized, predictive, and preventative forms of care that are delivered both in medical facilities and at home. However, it also notes the challenges of how healthcare providers and patients can effectively manage and utilize all of this new information.
Social media for tracking disease outbreaks–way of the future By.Dr.Mahboob a...Healthcare consultant
Traditional disease surveillance relies on data obtained from doctors, hospitals or laboratories through formal reporting systems. This yields valid and accurate data about emerging outbreaks and the impact of control strategies such as vaccinations. But it’s often not timely. Digital data are now publicly available from many sources. People talk about epidemics on social media using key words such as “fever” and “infection” before they are officially identified.
A surveillance system for detecting outbreaks of Ebola using Twitter, for example, could set geospatial tags for specific locations such as the African continent. It could search for a cluster of terms on the Twittersphere such as “haemorrhage”, “fever”, “virus”, “Ebola”, “Lassa” (an illness that can be confused with Ebola).
A system trying to identify influenza could mine terms that reflect visits to the doctor, purchase of tissues, paracetamol or aspirin from pharmacies, sick leave from work, as well as terms specific to the clinical syndrome of influenza.
eHealth or digital health refers to all health care services that use the internet and online tools. It aims to provide better care at lower costs through patient satisfaction. eHealth encompasses technologies like telemonitoring, mobile health, and connected care. It features informing and educating patients, collecting and analyzing data, enabling communication, and facilitating shared decision making to optimize health care processes and outcomes. eHealth takes many forms through computers, medical devices, apps, and future technologies. It is a broad concept that can start with small, customized online services for patients that provide efficiency while allowing health organizations to learn and develop integrated, multidisciplinary, and participatory care over time.
Access to oral health care services around the world is limited by a lack of universal coverage. The internet and social media can be an important source for patients to access supplementary oral health related information
The document discusses the use of smartphone technology in behavioral health care. It describes how apps can be used for symptom tracking, psychoeducation, and integrating treatment. Examples of apps are provided for various clinical areas like mood disorders, substance abuse, and anxiety. Both pros and cons of using apps are discussed. While apps have potential benefits, issues around quality standards, data security, and privacy need to be addressed. Additional ethical considerations involve setting clear boundaries for client communication.
What's next in healthcare digital marketing?Shawn M. Gross
The document discusses how healthcare organizations can better engage patients through digital marketing strategies that focus on personalized experiences and valuable health content delivered through mobile apps and social media. It emphasizes building lifelong relationships with patients by providing health resources and programs that are integrated into patients' daily lives beyond just clinical encounters. Creating "addictive experiences" using digital tools was presented as a way to increase patient loyalty, service utilization, and overall marketing effectiveness for healthcare providers.
Together is a mobile app designed to help cancer survivors transition between healthcare providers and treatment stages. Version 1 will be released for iPhone in August and focuses on facilitating communication between survivors, caregivers and providers through a secure "Care Conversation". It was co-designed over 6 weeks with input from survivors, caregivers, providers and experts to create an intuitive interface addressing key pain points around care coordination and transitions. The app leverages cutting edge design, security and data integration to provide a HIPAA-compliant personal health record and enable sharing of sensor data from devices.
- The document discusses the rise of participatory health and Health 2.0, where patients are more actively engaged in managing their own health through online tools and communities.
- Key aspects of Health 2.0 include personalized search/information, online communities for support/knowledge sharing, and new tools that unlock health data and enable transactions.
- Participatory health involves patients partnering with providers to reform healthcare delivery through continuous involvement in care, supported by online/mobile resources.
How do radiologists use social media? This lecture gives a better insight about both the advantages and downsides of using social media as a medical professional.
Vator Splash Health, Wellness & Wearables 2017
A presentation on the Vator conference in San Francisco, CA. Perhaps one of my favorite conference series in health tech featuring many perspectives: tech, insurance, genomics, behavioral health, diagnostics, devices and more.
This document discusses how Twitter can be used by surgeons to communicate medical evidence and influence public opinion. It provides examples of how Neil Floch, a bariatric surgeon, grew his Twitter following from 3,500 to 12,300 by tweeting studies, engaging with other users, and creating visual summaries of articles. The document outlines best practices for crafting effective tweets, such as including pictures, tagging other users, and using hashtags. It also shows how Twitter can measure the impact of tweets by tracking retweets, likes, and the results of polls. The overall message is that Twitter is a powerful tool for surgeons to educate the public and advocate for issues like obesity treatment.
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence and the Advancement of Digital He...Greenlight Guru
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence is part of the planned evolution of the digital health program with the intent to drive synergy for digital health efforts, align strategy with implementation, prepare the FDA for the digital health future, and protect patients and maintain the FDA standards of safety and effectiveness.
Ultimately, the program works to strategically advance science and evidence for digital health technologies that meets the needs of
stakeholders.
This free in-depth webinar, presented by Matthew DiamondChief Medical Officer, Digital Health Center of Excellence, will cover the digital health landscape and areas of application, goals and outcomes, planned services and launch plan, and the current areas of focus - including AI/ML-Based SaMD.
This presentation originally aired during the 2021 State of Medical Device Virtual Summit.
3rd Big Data Conference at Arab Health 2015Cheryl Prior
Newly launched as a full two-day conference programme, this year's format for Big Data Conference (28-29 January 2015 at Arab Health) will focus on the four main issues affecting the big data in the healthcare industry. With the new theme of 'From data-rich to decision smart healthcare', the topics will incorporate presentations, real-life case studies and interactive panel discussions, allowing senior level delegates to understand how big data can effectively and tangibly improve their everyday clinical practices and patient outcomes.
Key topics
Detection & Prediction
The wearable’s explosion
Digital health and data
Mhealth & big data
Conference Chair:
Dr Aaron Han, Chief of Department of Pathology, American Hospital, Dubai, UAE
Director Lee Rainie presented to physicians, administrators, and staff at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California on January 12 on understanding social networking and online health information seeking.
12 Gifts of Digital Health: How Futuristic Technologies Changed Healthcare an...Enspektos, LLC
When people talk about how digital technologies will influence health, many assume changes will happen years or decades into the future. Yet, in 2014 a range of digital tech, from Big Data to genomics, gave people the gift of life, knowledge and more. Look back at the year that was in digital health and understand that he future is now.
Will global HCPs networks become communities of choice for rare-disease speci...Len Starnes
The document discusses how global HCP social networks can provide rare disease specialists opportunities to connect and collaborate. It focuses on the neuroendocrine tumor (NET) specialist community on G-Med, which has over 4,000 members from 28 countries. Case studies on G-Med generate rapid responses, and surveys found high satisfaction among NET specialists with knowledge sharing and networking on the platform. Global networks may be better than medical societies for continuous rare disease specialist engagement.
Doctors in social media: the story so far, with Creation Pinpoint (slides)CREATION
Today we are seeing an explosion in doctors using public social media channels to talk with each other about clinical and practice matters. In this webcast, Daniel Ghinn presents some milestones in doctors' use of social media from recent years and reveals first-time insights from millions of analysed conversations between doctors online using Creation Pinpoint.
Also available as video webcast here: http://www.slideshare.net/CreationHealthcare/doctors-in-social-media-the-story-so-far
This document discusses characteristics of online healthcare consumers and the implications of internet and social media use. It describes that about half of US adults own smartphones and use them to look up health information online. It discusses benefits and risks of various technologies like email, texting, videos and social media. It also examines ethical issues around unreliable health information online and privacy breaches. Finally, it analyzes the role of nurses in ensuring effective health information dissemination and enhancing provider-patient communication through technology.
How Facebook and Twitter are Changing HealthcareKevin Clauson
Nova Southeastern University College of Pharmacy 2009 Fall Classic presentation examining the role of Facebook and Twitter in pharmacy and the development of participatory medicine.
When the Human Genome Project was declared complete back in 2003, there were high expectations set for genomic medicine. However, it has taken over a decade to begin moving from vision to reality. Today, the number of success stories remains relatively small, but they do stretch across the healthcare ecosystem, incorporating the prediction of drug responses, the diagnosis of diseases and the identification of targeted therapies. Stakeholders ranging from patients, healthcare providers and payers, researchers, diagnostic companies, policy-makers, life sciences businesses and governments now believe genomic medicine to be a potential game-changer
This document discusses the use of the internet and social media by healthcare consumers and professionals. It describes how consumers access online health information by searching, participating in support groups, and consulting with professionals. Social media allows for the exchange of user-generated health content. While social media provides benefits like increased knowledge and social support, it also poses privacy and reliability risks. The role of informatics nurses is to evaluate websites, assist with evaluating health information quality, and introduce patients to social media to increase access to health resources.
Pharma must change the ways it deals with physicians and patients. These three digital health technology companies will revolutionize the way Pharma does business.
Three Approaches to Predictive Analytics in HealthcareHealth Catalyst
Predictive analytics in healthcare must be timely, role-specific, and actionable to be successful. There are also three common types of healthcare predictive analytics: Risk scores (risk stratification using CMS-HCC or other models), What-if scenarios (simulations of specific outcomes given a certain combination of events, and Geo-spatial analytics (mapping a geographical location’s patient disease burden). The common thread in all of these is the element of action, or specifically, the intervention that really matters in healthcare predictive analytics.
What's next in healthcare digital marketing?Shawn M. Gross
The document discusses how healthcare organizations can better engage patients through digital marketing strategies that focus on personalized experiences and valuable health content delivered through mobile apps and social media. It emphasizes building lifelong relationships with patients by providing health resources and programs that are integrated into patients' daily lives beyond just clinical encounters. Creating "addictive experiences" using digital tools was presented as a way to increase patient loyalty, service utilization, and overall marketing effectiveness for healthcare providers.
Together is a mobile app designed to help cancer survivors transition between healthcare providers and treatment stages. Version 1 will be released for iPhone in August and focuses on facilitating communication between survivors, caregivers and providers through a secure "Care Conversation". It was co-designed over 6 weeks with input from survivors, caregivers, providers and experts to create an intuitive interface addressing key pain points around care coordination and transitions. The app leverages cutting edge design, security and data integration to provide a HIPAA-compliant personal health record and enable sharing of sensor data from devices.
- The document discusses the rise of participatory health and Health 2.0, where patients are more actively engaged in managing their own health through online tools and communities.
- Key aspects of Health 2.0 include personalized search/information, online communities for support/knowledge sharing, and new tools that unlock health data and enable transactions.
- Participatory health involves patients partnering with providers to reform healthcare delivery through continuous involvement in care, supported by online/mobile resources.
How do radiologists use social media? This lecture gives a better insight about both the advantages and downsides of using social media as a medical professional.
Vator Splash Health, Wellness & Wearables 2017
A presentation on the Vator conference in San Francisco, CA. Perhaps one of my favorite conference series in health tech featuring many perspectives: tech, insurance, genomics, behavioral health, diagnostics, devices and more.
This document discusses how Twitter can be used by surgeons to communicate medical evidence and influence public opinion. It provides examples of how Neil Floch, a bariatric surgeon, grew his Twitter following from 3,500 to 12,300 by tweeting studies, engaging with other users, and creating visual summaries of articles. The document outlines best practices for crafting effective tweets, such as including pictures, tagging other users, and using hashtags. It also shows how Twitter can measure the impact of tweets by tracking retweets, likes, and the results of polls. The overall message is that Twitter is a powerful tool for surgeons to educate the public and advocate for issues like obesity treatment.
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence and the Advancement of Digital He...Greenlight Guru
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence is part of the planned evolution of the digital health program with the intent to drive synergy for digital health efforts, align strategy with implementation, prepare the FDA for the digital health future, and protect patients and maintain the FDA standards of safety and effectiveness.
Ultimately, the program works to strategically advance science and evidence for digital health technologies that meets the needs of
stakeholders.
This free in-depth webinar, presented by Matthew DiamondChief Medical Officer, Digital Health Center of Excellence, will cover the digital health landscape and areas of application, goals and outcomes, planned services and launch plan, and the current areas of focus - including AI/ML-Based SaMD.
This presentation originally aired during the 2021 State of Medical Device Virtual Summit.
3rd Big Data Conference at Arab Health 2015Cheryl Prior
Newly launched as a full two-day conference programme, this year's format for Big Data Conference (28-29 January 2015 at Arab Health) will focus on the four main issues affecting the big data in the healthcare industry. With the new theme of 'From data-rich to decision smart healthcare', the topics will incorporate presentations, real-life case studies and interactive panel discussions, allowing senior level delegates to understand how big data can effectively and tangibly improve their everyday clinical practices and patient outcomes.
Key topics
Detection & Prediction
The wearable’s explosion
Digital health and data
Mhealth & big data
Conference Chair:
Dr Aaron Han, Chief of Department of Pathology, American Hospital, Dubai, UAE
Director Lee Rainie presented to physicians, administrators, and staff at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California on January 12 on understanding social networking and online health information seeking.
12 Gifts of Digital Health: How Futuristic Technologies Changed Healthcare an...Enspektos, LLC
When people talk about how digital technologies will influence health, many assume changes will happen years or decades into the future. Yet, in 2014 a range of digital tech, from Big Data to genomics, gave people the gift of life, knowledge and more. Look back at the year that was in digital health and understand that he future is now.
Will global HCPs networks become communities of choice for rare-disease speci...Len Starnes
The document discusses how global HCP social networks can provide rare disease specialists opportunities to connect and collaborate. It focuses on the neuroendocrine tumor (NET) specialist community on G-Med, which has over 4,000 members from 28 countries. Case studies on G-Med generate rapid responses, and surveys found high satisfaction among NET specialists with knowledge sharing and networking on the platform. Global networks may be better than medical societies for continuous rare disease specialist engagement.
Doctors in social media: the story so far, with Creation Pinpoint (slides)CREATION
Today we are seeing an explosion in doctors using public social media channels to talk with each other about clinical and practice matters. In this webcast, Daniel Ghinn presents some milestones in doctors' use of social media from recent years and reveals first-time insights from millions of analysed conversations between doctors online using Creation Pinpoint.
Also available as video webcast here: http://www.slideshare.net/CreationHealthcare/doctors-in-social-media-the-story-so-far
This document discusses characteristics of online healthcare consumers and the implications of internet and social media use. It describes that about half of US adults own smartphones and use them to look up health information online. It discusses benefits and risks of various technologies like email, texting, videos and social media. It also examines ethical issues around unreliable health information online and privacy breaches. Finally, it analyzes the role of nurses in ensuring effective health information dissemination and enhancing provider-patient communication through technology.
How Facebook and Twitter are Changing HealthcareKevin Clauson
Nova Southeastern University College of Pharmacy 2009 Fall Classic presentation examining the role of Facebook and Twitter in pharmacy and the development of participatory medicine.
When the Human Genome Project was declared complete back in 2003, there were high expectations set for genomic medicine. However, it has taken over a decade to begin moving from vision to reality. Today, the number of success stories remains relatively small, but they do stretch across the healthcare ecosystem, incorporating the prediction of drug responses, the diagnosis of diseases and the identification of targeted therapies. Stakeholders ranging from patients, healthcare providers and payers, researchers, diagnostic companies, policy-makers, life sciences businesses and governments now believe genomic medicine to be a potential game-changer
This document discusses the use of the internet and social media by healthcare consumers and professionals. It describes how consumers access online health information by searching, participating in support groups, and consulting with professionals. Social media allows for the exchange of user-generated health content. While social media provides benefits like increased knowledge and social support, it also poses privacy and reliability risks. The role of informatics nurses is to evaluate websites, assist with evaluating health information quality, and introduce patients to social media to increase access to health resources.
Pharma must change the ways it deals with physicians and patients. These three digital health technology companies will revolutionize the way Pharma does business.
Three Approaches to Predictive Analytics in HealthcareHealth Catalyst
Predictive analytics in healthcare must be timely, role-specific, and actionable to be successful. There are also three common types of healthcare predictive analytics: Risk scores (risk stratification using CMS-HCC or other models), What-if scenarios (simulations of specific outcomes given a certain combination of events, and Geo-spatial analytics (mapping a geographical location’s patient disease burden). The common thread in all of these is the element of action, or specifically, the intervention that really matters in healthcare predictive analytics.
Portare i propri dati o servizi su cloud fa ancora paura e la paura è una barriera all’ingresso. Ma davvero il Cloud è così pericoloso? Davvero è meno sicuro di quanto non lo sia custodire tutto in casa?
La risposta sta in un paragone spesso usato in questi casi, che è quello dei risparmi: è più sicuro portare i propri soldi in banca che tenerli a casa propria, perché la banca ha una capacità di difesa dei propri averi molto più elevata di quanto ciascuno di noi possa fare autonomamente.
Nel mondo IT accade la stessa cosa. Sicuramente i cloud provider sono in grado di creare dei livelli di difesa e protezione dei dati dei propri clienti superiori rispetto a quanto non possa fare internamente l’azienda stessa. Tuttavia, mentre i soldi depositati in banca vengono rimpiazzati da altri soldi nel caso di una rapina, i propri dati non possono essere rimpiazzati da altri dati una volta persi o rubati. Questo dimostra che le paure nell’affrontare il cloud sono fondate e che la sfida per i cloud provider è molto elevata. Mentre la banca può mettere in conto di essere svaligiata, i cloud provider non possono neanche prendere in considerazione tale ipotesi.
In questo panel capiremo come questi problemi sono stati risolti e quali sono le tecnologie attualmente disponibili per far fronte a queste eventualità.
The Australian Environment Before Human Habitationmrrobbo
Australia is the smallest continent, about 3/4 the size of Africa and 1/6 the size of Asia or the Americas. It is the largest island in the world, with a coastline of over 12,000 miles. Geologically, Australia dates back 2,000 years when it was once part of the Antarctic continent and gradually drifted to its present location.
This document defines and provides examples for various vocabulary words:
- Madras refers to a patterned cotton fabric typically used for shirts.
- A cowlick is a lock of hair that grows in a different direction and is hard to comb flat.
- Unfathomable means difficult or impossible to understand.
- Savvy means shrewd and knowledgeable about life's realities.
- Aloof describes someone who is not friendly or forthcoming and seems cool and distant.
This provides an overview of both WIH Resource Group\'s Client-Specific Services and a summary of the parameters in developing a successful wastebyrail program.
The document summarizes the research problem of ontological conjunctive query answering over large knowledge bases. It involves querying a knowledge base that contains factual knowledge encoded as logical facts along with an ontology of universal knowledge encoded as rules. The decision problem is determining if a conjunctive query is entailed by the knowledge base, which requires applying rules to enrich the facts and then finding a substitution that associates the terms in the query to terms in the enriched facts.
The document provides an update on the 18-month goals and progress of the Health Story Project from July 2008 to December 2009. The goals included solidifying operations and developing their brand, building a coalition of members, generating market demand, and maintaining momentum in product development and adoption. Key accomplishments included establishing operational infrastructure, growing membership and financial support, engaging stakeholders through presentations and press, and releasing initial clinical document standards. The 5-year goals look to strengthen these areas and achieve national endorsement and widespread adoption of their work.
United Country is a large real estate franchise with over 650 offices and 4,000 agents. They specialize in rural and small town properties. They have extensive commercial real estate listings totaling $1.35 billion in value. Their marketing strategies include national advertising, proprietary websites and publications, search engine optimization, and partnerships with real estate companies like Colliers International to provide national and global exposure for commercial real estate listings.
This document discusses Meaningful Use and quality measures in healthcare and how they relate to the Healthstory Project. It provides an overview of Meaningful Use, including its goals of improving quality, safety, efficiency and reducing disparities. It outlines the core and menu sets of Meaningful Use measures. It also discusses quality reporting measures such as those from hospital payments and The Joint Commission. Finally, it introduces the Healthstory Project, which aims to develop standards to bridge structured data and narrative documents in electronic health records.
This document summarizes the April 20, 2011 meeting of the Great Lakes Area .NET Users Group (GANG). It lists the 2011 executive officers and volunteers. It also provides contact information and announces upcoming meetings, special interest groups, and membership and sponsorship opportunities. Sponsors and discounts for group members are acknowledged.
The document discusses the importance of securing account names and profiles on social media, blogs, and directories that match your brand name. It recommends securing accounts on platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, and Blogger to establish an online presence. The service offered will set up, design, and optimize all of these profiles to represent the brand and help establish its identity on the internet.
Communities of Care, Strategic Social Interaction Design for Healthcare - ide...Mad*Pow
This document discusses using social media in healthcare. It begins by defining social media and outlining how it could help in healthcare by providing more frequent access to information and healthcare providers. Examples of current social media use in healthcare are given, such as patient forums and doctors participating on forums. Opportunities for using social media to connect patients with their care team, track health data, and enable patient-doctor interactions are presented. Risks and barriers like legal issues and lack of positive results are also covered. The document concludes by asking attendees what social media examples they have seen work well and what they hope to see in the future regarding social media in healthcare.
Researchers, Reporters & Everything in BetweenKara Gavin
A talk about how academic researchers can understand and navigate the news media and institutional communications landscape, prepared for the University of Michigan National Clinician Scholars Program
The document outlines a communication strategy proposed by Rashi Sharma and Parul Bhatia for the brand MedCare. It involves redefining medical care through six pillars of support and leveraging social media. Key aspects of the strategy include hosting MedCare Talks sessions on health topics, promoting them on social media and measuring engagement. Performance will be tracked using metrics like website traffic, social media followers and responses to blogs and the mobile app.
How to Use Twitter To Educate Patients And Increase Professional VisibilityMarie Ennis-O'Connor
This document discusses how healthcare professionals can use Twitter to educate patients, increase visibility, and engage in social media. It provides tips for setting up a Twitter profile, following others, live tweeting conferences, and maintaining a professional online identity. The key benefits highlighted are finding support and community, connecting with colleagues, establishing thought leadership, and improving patient information.
Presentation on Social Media presented Wednesday, November 19, 2014 at University of Minnesota, Division of Gynecologic Oncology Annual Translational Working Group Research Day
People use social media for health for several reasons: it is fast, allows contacting many people at once, is free, and easy. Some ways people use social media for health include checking symptoms online, finding support groups, asking doctors opinions on diets and medications, and looking up exercise and diets. While social media provides benefits like multiple opinions and anonymity, it also poses risks like inaccurate information and potential for misdiagnosis.
This document discusses the rise of social media and its implications for medicine. It defines social media as globally accessible media that allows anyone to easily create and share content. The document outlines the various types of social media and reasons why medical professionals may want to participate, including for education, research, patient care, and their careers. It acknowledges barriers like time, reputation risks, and liability but argues that social media is changing relationships in healthcare whether liked or not. The key is learning to practice social media like an art, focusing on how information is shared rather than just what is known.
Crotty engaging patients in new ways from open notes to social mediaTrimed Media Group
The document discusses new ways to engage patients through open notes and social media. It describes initial findings from the OpenNotes project that showed patients found value in reading clinical notes. It also outlines how patients use social media to find health information and connect with others. The document argues that healthcare providers can leverage these technologies and concepts to reduce information asymmetry, educate patients, and learn from them to provide more engaging and effective care.
#SoMe for Surgeons: Opportunity & Peril - 2018 - St. Agnes Grand Rounds - finalNiraj Gusani
This document discusses the opportunities and risks of physicians using social media professionally. It begins by defining social media and providing statistics on its growth and medical professionals' use of platforms like Twitter. The document then explores how physicians, medical institutions, and patients currently use social media for accessing new information, education, collaboration, and more. It also outlines some of the key risks around privacy, professionalism, and information credibility. Overall, the document advocates for physicians to leverage social media wisely while following guidelines to address risks and opportunities it provides for medical knowledge sharing and community building.
Social Media and Health Care – How Does the Industry Navigate the New Communi...Mohammad Shahnewaz
Social media has fundamentally changed the patient to patient and patient to provider communications relationship. The advent of transparent, real time social media communication platforms that allow open and honest dialogue presents a host of opportunities for health care facilities to capitalize on positive patient sentiment and build a trusted support community to actively engage with. Patient evangelists can be identified and leveraged to spread good will and build brand equity to help maintain trust and confidence in health care services.
This document discusses the potential benefits of physicians using social media and engaging patients. It outlines how social media can enhance patient engagement, be used in medical education, and provide a return on investment. Some key points include:
- Social media allows bidirectional communication between patients, doctors, and other stakeholders.
- It can help empower patients and move towards a health 2.0 model with more engaged patients.
- Physicians should consider using social media to engage with patients, enhance their expertise, and stay relevant in an increasingly digital world.
- There are opportunities to use social media in medical education and for collaborations, but privacy and professionalism must be considered.
Keynote Presentation: Mayo Clinic Embraces Social Media to Improve Clinical Practice, Research & Education
Presented by: Dr. Farris Timimi, Medical Director, Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media, Mayo Clinic
Dr. Timimi, a practicing Cardiologist, will share how Mayo Clinic fosters conversations and improves care with patients through social technologies. Dr. Timimi will provide specific case study examples of how The Center for Social Media at Mayo clinic is helping transition the patient-provider relationship from its current transactional nature to the future two-way partnership and open engagement model. Dr. Timimi will also present how social media progresses the patient education process.
www.bdionline.com
EPL 101: Health Care Social Media and ProfessionalismMayo Clinic
Slides from Dr. Farris Timimi's presentation in Mayo Clinic's Social Media Residency Program. For more information on Social Media Residency go to http://network.socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/
The Use of Social Networks in the prevention of childhood obesityRomina Cialdella
The document discusses using social networks to help prevent childhood obesity. It notes that childhood obesity rates have doubled or tripled in most countries over the past 30 years. Social networks can help educate the public, reach large audiences, strengthen support networks, and mobilize key actors. Objectives include facilitating the dissemination of health information through social networks. Research is needed to identify influential online figures to engage and help spread information. Messages should be clear, concise, relevant and call people to action. Social networks allow two-way communication and participation in health.
John Sharp presents on Cleveland Clinic's approach to social media in healthcare. He outlines opportunities and risks of social media use. Cleveland Clinic took a step-by-step approach, starting small by monitoring social media and establishing basic presences. They expanded use over time by developing blogs and online communities while educating employees on proper social media policies. With controls and education, Cleveland Clinic was able to successfully engage patients and overcome concerns around social media in healthcare.
Similaire à Master chef in healthcare- integrating social media - @DrNic1 (20)
Exploring the potential of technology and innovation - everything from wearables, genomics and robotics that are washing over healthcare at an exponential rate and influencing every aspect of our lives and what it will mean to our healthcare system and in particular to how we deliver healthcare to the population.
What are the next big innovations that will affect telehealth and how might they affect you and your organization. How should you plan for these changes and what can you do to incorporate them into your business? What small incremental improvements can you take to move you along the path towards the next leap in innovation.
Predictive Modeling is Here - Dance with the Dragon of Artificial IntelligenceNick van Terheyden
Presentation at AHIMA on Predictive Modeling given on September 24, 2018:
Welcome to the age of data – the revolution has arrived made possible by new sources of data available in every industry and every walk of life. No area has been untouched and we see examples from baseball to the steady stream of customized adverts and content. Big data is improving the utilization of resources, efficiency, capacity, and ultimately access to healthcare. The next frontier is predicting futures. Can we identify the patients that are sickest and mitigate their disease progression? Traditional population health programs have focused on the high utilization patients predicting their progression and applying interventions to improve their health and decrease the costs associated with treating their disease progression. But the analysis of data has its perils risking false discoveries as our unconscious bias impacts our search of these huge troves of data in a modern-day version of “I know the facts, now let’s find ‘em” to “confirm” our facts. But the reality of healthcare and increasing insights into a precision-guided healthcare system it is increasingly clear that no membership population is “average”. The interplay between even a couple of input factors and comorbidities can be very non-linear.
Dr Nick will explore the potential for technology and innovation - everything from wearables, genomics and robotics that are washing over our world at an exponential rate and influencing every aspect of our activities and what it will mean to our lives and in particular to the delivery of healthcare.
How can this technology revolution change the cost profile and democratize access to healthcare? Join Dr Nick as he takes you on an exciting journey into the future of healthcare and the exciting developments that will increase accessibility to healthcare and will revolutionize the way care is delivered.
Embracing new technology wearables - Dr Nick van TerheydenNick van Terheyden
The document discusses emerging technologies that will transform healthcare, including wearable devices, sensors, robotics, virtual assistants and telehealth. It notes that consumers are increasingly willing to use technologies like video visits with doctors and sensors to monitor health at home. The future will see an exponential growth of data from these sources that will challenge data management and require new approaches beyond the traditional scientific method. Overall, technologies like genomics, artificial intelligence and 3D printing will revolutionize disease diagnosis and treatment.
Digital health summit - Baylor Scott & White innovation panelNick van Terheyden
Overview of the status and need for Digital Health delivered at the Baylor Scott and White Digital Health Summit focusing on innovation and the risks and rewards and the innovation process
The document discusses the future of wearable technology and its integration into healthcare environments. It notes that wearables and the Internet of Things will surpass smartphones and personal computers by 2018. Wearables allow for ubiquitous, low-cost, always-on health monitoring through sensors that track activity, sleep, mood, vital signs and other health metrics. This generates data that can influence health behaviors. The future of medicine will be predictive, personalized, precise, participatory and preventive by leveraging data science and software applications.
Gartner ranked Dell the #1 worldwide IT services provider in healthcare in 2014. Dell sees global disruptions in healthcare delivery and continues to invest in strategies to address these rapid changes. They are actively enhancing development, implementation and adoption of novel technologies, services, and applications that will revolutionize information-driven care, resulting in improved patient outcomes and overall cost savings worldwide. Dr. Nick is responsible for providing strategic insight and will discuss some Dell’s strategies to achieve an IT environment that is interconnected, efficient and patient-focused.
AHIMA Game of documentation - dance with the icd10 dragonNick van Terheyden
Following on from AHIMA 2014 this AHIMA 2015 session will follow last years Successful Presentation “Game of Documentation: Winter is Coming – Surviving ICD-10” to address the genuine concerns of clinicians and demonstrate to them why they must not just accept ICD10 but should be demanding it. As Yoda said
“Always in motion is the future…a little more knowledge lights our way.”
ICD-10 has been implemented but resistance remains high and in a recent remarks by the AMA president that said
“If it was a droid, ICD-10 would serve Darth Vader… For more than a decade, the AMA kept ICD-10 at bay – and we want to freeze it in carbonite!”
But despite this the financial viability and performance of hospitals and physicians are impacted by poor quality of data that is captured with an outdated 1970s-era coding system
The first leap into big data is collecting information with precision and clarity – something that cannot be achieved with a coding system that does not capture Ebola nor the basic classification of myocardial infarction STEMI and Non-STEMI. Everyone – ICD10 supporters and opponents wants the best possible care when they access our healthcare system – but how do they know they are receiving this if we are unable to accurately collect information about diseases and treatments and link outcomes to treatments.
https://ahima.confex.com/ahima/87am/webprogram/Session6176.html
I manage my health with digital tools and I’m not alone. An estimated and growing 69% of consumers and patients are also engaged in monitoring their own healthcare . The interest in personal wellness combined with the proliferation of healthcare ‘wearables’ available to consumer puts us on the cusp of an extraordinary shift in healthcare: Technology enabled patients are empowered to change their lifestyle to prevent or stop chronic disease, and become healthier than ever before. The implications of this on every aspect of the healthcare industry –from delivery and population health to access and cost will be astounding.
But wearable technology is still in its infancy, quite complex and limited in what it can do. The next generation will be intelligent and voice-enabled and go beyond tracking to interacting with and assisting consumers with their healthcare choices, and changing behaviors for the better. Imagine a wearable that could warn you of risks developing, nudge you towards better choices for that day based on your health profile, and keep you engaged in a treatment regime.
Connected Health - The small matter of price - Nick van Terheyden, MDNick van Terheyden
The Centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services decision to include some reimbursement in 2015 for remote monitoring is hailed as a revolutionary step for mHealth. Here are some insights from the different ecosystem players.
- With more insurance plans being open to telemedicine coverage and remote patient monitoring, see how you can take advantage of these new payments and partner with the right groups
- With Medicare fining a record number of hospitals - 2,610 - for having too many patients returning within a month. See how hospitals are adapting to the charges and changes
- Explore the advantages of preventative care at a population management and enterprise level, creating healthier workforces with less strain on the medical system and lowering insurance pay outs
An exploration of Social media through the eyes of a Chief Medical Officer and clinicians. How can they effectively leverage resources in healthcare marketing and social media. Learn about the roles, responsibilities and activities of these clinical professionals and how they can be effectively used to extend marketing reach and build market thought leadership programs
The document discusses the growing use of wearable technology and voice assistants in healthcare. It notes that wearable devices are becoming more common for tracking health metrics like activity, diet, sleep and vitals. Voice assistants have potential to make interacting with this data and health apps easier by allowing inputs and queries by voice rather than requiring users to manually enter data into apps. The document envisions voice assistants being integrated into wearables and health apps to help with tasks like logging food, activity, medication reminders and getting updates on progress directly from devices.
Whether the user is interacting with a mobile device, a web site, or a phone-based health technology system, there is often a large gap between what the user wants to accomplish and how they want to accomplish it, and what they actually get from the system. The interface can be challenging and capturing any feedback or user interactions is difficult using on keyboards and point and click tools. Speech Recognition is changing this interaction by capturing the clinical input and allowing clinicians and healthcare users to access systems that listen and responds seamlessly understanding the context and the intent turning what the users wants into what they get.
The document discusses mHealth reimbursement and who will pay for mHealth services. It notes that mHealth technologies can save billions per year through early intervention for conditions like congestive heart failure. However, establishing return on investment for mHealth has been limited. The document advocates expanding coverage of telehealth and remote patient monitoring through Medicare and other alternative funding models in order to encourage use of mHealth technologies.
Game of documentation, Winter is coming Surviving ICD10Nick van Terheyden
The document provides an overview of ICD-10 implementation and the impact of clinical documentation on outcomes and reimbursement. It discusses how accurate documentation is important for determining severity of illness and risk adjustment, which drives hospital reimbursement and quality metrics. It emphasizes that physicians need to fully document their clinical decision making to avoid issues like payment denials, penalties, or inaccurate performance assessments that could arise from incomplete records.
This document discusses leveraging technology to advance clinical documentation improvement (CDI) programs. It notes that current CDI programs focus primarily on revenue cycle management and have resulted in physician cynicism. The document advocates for more physician-engaged CDI programs that integrate with quality initiatives and utilize technology like computer-assisted physician documentation (CAPD) to provide real-time guidance to physicians. This could help address challenges under ICD-10 by capturing accurate clinical impressions and ensuring compliant documentation. The document concludes that successful CDI programs require advanced, clinically integrated technologies that fit with physician workflows.
Pipeline session speech and medical intelligence – revolutionizing the doctor...Nick van Terheyden
speech and medical intelligence – revolutionizing the doctor and patient experience
Speech is delivering efficiencies and improves EHR adoption
Adding Clinical Language Understanding is set to revolutionize healthcare delivery allowing the clinician to focus on the patient not the technology delivering real time medical intelligence at the point of care.
Medical Intelligence helps healthcare providers transform patient stories into high-value clinically actionable medical information
Improving the quality, efficiency and value of documentation and help drive better care without burdening the clinicians with data entry tasks
This presentation will provide insight into Watson’s DeepQA process, the complexities and
details of the DeepQA challenge, and how these tools and techniques can be applied in a clinical setting. Prototype tools will be presented that open conceptual frameworks for
delivering advanced analytics in the radiologist’s workplace that offer rapid access to critical, specific and highly relevant data with corresponding links to underlying evidence.
This document provides a summary of a presentation given by Nick van Terheyden on how IBM's Watson technology can be applied in healthcare settings. The presentation discusses how Watson can help clinicians access up-to-date medical information and make evidence-based decisions by analyzing large amounts of structured and unstructured data. It also outlines some potential use cases for Watson in areas like differential diagnosis, medication dosing, and treatment recommendations tailored to individual patients. However, the document notes that challenges remain around integrating Watson with existing healthcare systems and addressing concerns that technology may not be able to replace the human aspects of medical care.
This document discusses using IBM's Watson technology in healthcare applications, specifically in radiology. It describes how Watson can consume medical reports and patient information to provide differential diagnoses, treatment recommendations, and next steps. It also outlines challenges of integrating Watson with existing medical systems and ensuring ongoing access to updated medical data sources. While Watson excels at data analysis, the document notes that technology may struggle to replace the human qualities patients desire in their doctors, such as empathy and personalization.
Chandrima Spa Ajman is one of the leading Massage Center in Ajman, which is open 24 hours exclusively for men. Being one of the most affordable Spa in Ajman, we offer Body to Body massage, Kerala Massage, Malayali Massage, Indian Massage, Pakistani Massage Russian massage, Thai massage, Swedish massage, Hot Stone Massage, Deep Tissue Massage, and many more. Indulge in the ultimate massage experience and book your appointment today. We are confident that you will leave our Massage spa feeling refreshed, rejuvenated, and ready to take on the world.
Visit : https://massagespaajman.com/
Call : 052 987 1315
Letter to MREC - application to conduct studyAzreen Aj
Application to conduct study on research title 'Awareness and knowledge of oral cancer and precancer among dental outpatient in Klinik Pergigian Merlimau, Melaka'
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardso...rightmanforbloodline
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardson, Verified Chapters 1 - 18, Complete Newest Version
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardson, Verified Chapters 1 - 18, Complete Newest Version
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardson, Verified Chapters 1 - 18, Complete Newest Version
LGBTQ+ Adults: Unique Opportunities and Inclusive Approaches to CareVITASAuthor
This webinar helps clinicians understand the unique healthcare needs of the LGBTQ+ community, primarily in relation to end-of-life care. Topics include social and cultural background and challenges, healthcare disparities, advanced care planning, and strategies for reaching the community and improving quality of care.
About this webinar: This talk will introduce what cancer rehabilitation is, where it fits into the cancer trajectory, and who can benefit from it. In addition, the current landscape of cancer rehabilitation in Canada will be discussed and the need for advocacy to increase access to this essential component of cancer care.
Can Allopathy and Homeopathy Be Used Together in India.pdfDharma Homoeopathy
This article explores the potential for combining allopathy and homeopathy in India, examining the benefits, challenges, and the emerging field of integrative medicine.
Can coffee help me lose weight? Yes, 25,422 users in the USA use it for that ...nirahealhty
The South Beach Coffee Java Diet is a variation of the popular South Beach Diet, which was developed by cardiologist Dr. Arthur Agatston. The original South Beach Diet focuses on consuming lean proteins, healthy fats, and low-glycemic index carbohydrates. The South Beach Coffee Java Diet adds the element of coffee, specifically caffeine, to enhance weight loss and improve energy levels.
R3 Stem Cell Therapy: A New Hope for Women with Ovarian FailureR3 Stem Cell
Discover the groundbreaking advancements in stem cell therapy by R3 Stem Cell, offering new hope for women with ovarian failure. This innovative treatment aims to restore ovarian function, improve fertility, and enhance overall well-being, revolutionizing reproductive health for women worldwide.
MBC Support Group for Black Women – Insights in Genetic Testing.pdfbkling
Christina Spears, breast cancer genetic counselor at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, joined us for the MBC Support Group for Black Women to discuss the importance of genetic testing in communities of color and answer pressing questions.
Let's Talk About It: Breast Cancer (What is Mindset and Does it Really Matter?)bkling
Your mindset is the way you make sense of the world around you. This lens influences the way you think, the way you feel, and how you might behave in certain situations. Let's talk about mindset myths that can get us into trouble and ways to cultivate a mindset to support your cancer survivorship in authentic ways. Let’s Talk About It!
Master chef in healthcare- integrating social media - @DrNic1
1. MasterChef in Healthcare: Integrating
Social Media
April 15, 2015
Nick van Terheyden, MD
@drnic1
http://drnick.vanterheyden.com
DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily represent official policy or position of HIMSS.
#HIMSS15
#DrHIT
3. Learning Objectives
• Discuss Social media in healthcare including how it
can augment clinical practice and patient engagement
• Describe the protocols and language of the social
media environment
• Explain how the different tools and workflows can be
effectively incorporated into the busy clinical setting
• Provide examples of how social media is used and
benefiting physicians, hospitals, clinical practices and
patients
• Demonstrate social media use as part of the active
engagement of the audience at the conference
4. An Introduction to the Benefits
Realized for the Value of Health IT
Satisfaction: Allowing physicians and staff to interact dynamically with patients
improving the intra team and clinician patient communication
The process of improving both the speed and quality of communication has the effect
of raising the provider, staff and patient satisfaction
Treatment/Clinical: Improves the efficiency of communications and that has an
immediate effect on clinical quality and patient safety. Increases the efficiency and
timeliness of communication between staff providers and patients and increases the
time and engagement that providers can spend with their patients
Electronic Information/Data: Contributes to the ability for clinicians to share clinical
data effectively and efficiently with their patients. Population health reporting using
social media as a tracking mechanism that allows researchers and clinicians insight
into the spread of disease
Prevention & Patient Education: Patient education improved distributing information
using methods that patients prefer and are more likely to comply with. Aggregate of
patients into related groups that engage in self-help, and provide support that
improves overall patient education and awareness of their conditions and how to
better manage their own health
Savings: Increased efficiency driven by improved workflow, better patient
management, and keeping patients healthy through engaged interactions. Hospitals
will see improved patient satisfaction scores that are linked to improved healthcare,
but also linked too more accurate documentation and coding of clinical conditions by
virtue of the increased patient engagement.
http://www.himss.org/ValueSuite
5. Polling
• Open the HIMSS App
• Main Menu – Speakers – Search for
“TERH….EYDEN”
• Select my Name – Nick van Terheyden
6.
7. Agenda
• Setting the Stage
– Technology and Social Media in our lives
– Social Media in Other Areas
– Live tweeting in this session
• What is Social Media
– The Basics
– Twitter
– Terms (Hashtags, RT’s DM etc) and Who to follow
– Facebook & LinkedIn
• What to use it for
• What not to Do (Dos and Don’ts)
• Some Examples (Mayo, UMD)
13. › Source: Caroline McSwain (http://carolinemcswain.wordpress.com/2010/10/25/the-internet-a-student%E2%80%99s-greatest-asset-or-worst-distraction/)
Talking
on phone
Surfing
the web?
Watching
television
Reading a
magazine
Listening
to music
Texting
a friend
14. What is Social Media?
• Definition
• Platform for interactions where individuals
and organizations can interact, create,
share, obtain and exchange information and
ideas.
• Web-based and mobile technologies used
to turn communication into interactive
dialogue between organizations,
communities, and individuals
15. SURVEY Question
• As a Patient (or Patient Advocate) I use the internet to Access Health
Information
• a) Yes
• b) No
16. Everyone is on Board
• 87% of US
adults use the
internet
17. Patients are coming armed and ready
68% bring a list of questions to visit with physicians
Nearly 40% check online sources in advance
80% consider themselves engaged in managing their health
Respondents were able to choose multiple items.
Source:
http://www.nuance.com/for-healthcare/artofmedicine/index.htm
18. Everyone is on Board
• 77% of US
health seekers
began their
search at a
search engine
• 13% start their
search at a site
that specializes
in health
information,
like WebMD
19. Everyone is on Board
Patients Will Find You
• 3-4% of US
users have
posted a review
of treatment,
hospital or clinic
• 37% of internet
users say they
have rated a
product, service,
or person online
before
26. What is Social Media?
• It’s a conversation, not a lecture
• It’s an extension of everyday interaction
• It’s group driven, not top-down
• It’s messy, disorganized & hard to control
• It’s a tool, not an end-point
• But most of all…
29. SURVEY Question
• Do you have a Twitter Account and if so How Often do you Tweet
• a) I tweet several times per day
• b) I tweet once per day
• c) I tweet once per week
• d) I tweet sporadically
• e) I don’t have or don’t use a Twitter Account
30. •Go to Twitter.com
•“Join the Conversation”
•Fill out Basic Information
•See if your friends are on
Twitter
•Twitter Suggestions
•Set up a Profile – One
Line Bio
Twitter Social Experiment:
Follow @ManorRdGoods
31. What to Tweet?
• What you have read that you want to share with others
• When and where you are speaking
• Something you post on your blog
• A link to a Web site that you find interesting
• Listen to conversations happening online using keywords (hashtags,
lists and searches) – learn from your colleagues, friends and patients
• Befriend people – and then earn their trust by solve problems,
answering queries, helping and providing useful information
• Share information, valuable content with them
• Questions and Requests for information and help – crowdsourcing
answers
• At a minimum – Lurk, Listen and Learn
31
32. 32
Key Twitter To-dos
• Follow the right people in your industry
• You can mix and match interests
• Tweeting everything you do say and eat Not cool
• Look at your colleagues, companies and institutions and use them to
help guide you
• Use it to start conversations with people you want to get to know
• Tweeting isn’t a one-time event
• Get to know your followers and the people you follow and their
interests
• Write/speak once, publish many times (blog, Twitter, Email, YouTube)
• Tweet unto others as you would have them Tweet unto you
• Be accurate
33. •What is a Twitter Handle
•The “@” sign
•What is an RT?
•What is an MT?
•What is the “#” all about?
•What is a DM?
•What about Lists
•Follow/Unfollow
•Discover is your Friend
34. How to Get Started
• Who to Follow
• What Hash Tags to Follow
• Tweet Chats
• Use a client TweetChat
• http://www.symplur.com/healthcare-hashtags/tweet-chats/
• And Follow Symplur : @healthhashtags
• And @RiteTag with browser extension
#hcsm (h/c social media)
#HCLDR (healthcare leaders)
#HITsm (health IT social media)
#MedEd (medical education)
#mHealth (mobile health)
35. How to Get Started
• Who to Follow in Patient and Personal Health
• What Hash Tags to Follow
#eolchat (end of life/elder chat)
#BCSM (breast-cancer social media)
#LCSM (lung-cancer social media)
#BTSM (brain tumor social media)
#S4PM (Society for participatory
medicine)
36. Social Media Adoption Curve
education
observation
broadcast
participation
relationship
s
collaboration
1-way → 2-way
take value → add value
social media
experience
mixtmediastrategies.com
37. SURVEY Question
• Do you have a Facebook account and how often do you use it
• a) I check and post to Facebook several times per day
• b) I check and post to Facebook once per day
• c) I check and post to Facebook once per week or just at weekends
• d) I check and post to Facebook sporadically
• e) I don’t have or don’t use a Facebook account
38.
39. Facebook
•You can Mix Personal with
Professional but be Careful
•Facebook is more social
and personal
•No Character limitations
40. – Answers (and asking questions)
– Business Version of Facebook
– It is (or can be) your Business Store Front
– Conversations, posts and Connections
– Lots of features and functionalities including
– Groups, conversations and connections,
links to blogs, pages and even
presentations (Slideshare)
– The LinkedIn URL should be on your
business card and in your email signature
42. Best practices
• Foster a culture of openness and listening.
• Trust your staff to be good communicators.
• Train people how to blog, tweet and post.
• Disclose everything upfront.
• Be accurate.
• Make sure you have a solid policy for social
media for staff and yourself
42
43. Building Your Brand
• 61% are likely to trust information from providers posted on
social media
• 45% of consumers said social media sites would impact their
decision to seek a second opinion
• Most consumers remain uneducated about their chronic
condition. All physicians should view social media as a value-
added educational tool – working 24/7/365
• 40% of consumers said social media sites affect how they
cope with their chronic condition
• 41% of consumers said that they would use social media to
select a physician
• Consumers want Services Delivered by (Alternative) Social
Media
47. How the Mayo Clinic uses social media
• Facebook: Multiple Properties with different
but connected Faces building communities
with Patients and Other Media
• Twitter: Word of Mouth in the New Age of
Social Media
• Blogs: News information and Search
Engines
• Youtube: Big resource and heavily trafficked
by patients and clients
• Cross promotion: Linked properties that
cross promote
50. Best Practices at other Hospitals
• Community Engagement
• Real-time education
• Referring Physician Outreach
• Coordinated Social Media
Programs
• Customer Service
• Crisis Communications
55. JAMA 2012 Report
• 60% of US Medical schools reported
incidents of students posting unprofessional
online content
• 13% reported violations of patient
confidentiality
• 52% reported student use of profanity
• 48% reported frankly discriminatory
language
• 39% reported depiction of intoxication
• 28% reported sexually suggestive material
JAMA. 2009;302(12):1309-1315. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.1387.
59. Simple Policy (courtesy of Mayo)
The 12-word Social Media Policy from the Mayo Clinic
Don’t Lie
Don’t Pry
Don’t Cheat
Can’t Delete
Don’t Steal
Don’t Reveal
http://network.socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/discussion/a-12-word-social-media-policy/
62. Healthcare Social Media – Summary
•The Impact of Social Media is Growing
in Healthcare
•In 2005 only 5% of all adults used
social media, by 2011 it was 50% and
today it is in excess of 70%.
Healthcare has been slower than most
industries to adopt social media, but
PWC estimates that 1 in 3 adults use
healthcare social media sites – and it
continues to increase.
63. Healthcare Social Media – Summary
•Social Media for Physicians is a Game
Changer
•Social media, when effective, will
establish a physician’s brand and
connect him/her with those in need of
their services
•With increased deductibles, more
consumers will “shop” using social
media sites.
64. Healthcare Social Media – Summary
•Social Media will Expand the
Physician’s Role with Patients
•Social media is shaping patient
encounters with physicians and that
impact is expected to increase
significantly
•Extending the patient experience will
foster existing patient relationships
and improve patient outcomes,
especially for long-term chronic
conditions.
65. Summary
The biggest risk of social media in
health care is not using it at all
Social Media Ladder
66. SURVEY Question
• After listening to this presentation I will be
looking/using/interacting/participating more in social media for work:
• a) I am already fully engaged
• b) Very Likely
• c) Somewhat unlikely
• d) Highly unlikely
• e) Unsure
67. An Introduction to the Benefits
Realized for the Value of Health IT
Satisfaction: Allowing physicians and staff to interact dynamically with patients
improving the intra team and clinician patient communication
The process of improving both the speed and quality of communication has the effect
of raising the provider, staff and patient satisfaction
Treatment/Clinical: Improves the efficiency of communications and that has an
immediate effect on clinical quality and patient safety. Increases the efficiency and
timeliness of communication between staff providers and patients and increases the
time and engagement that providers can spend with their patients
Electronic Information/Data: Contributes to the ability for clinicians to share clinical
data effectively and efficiently with their patients. Population health reporting using
social media as a tracking mechanism that allows researchers and clinicians insight
into the spread of disease
Prevention & Patient Education: Patient education improved distributing information
using methods that patients prefer and are more likely to comply with. Aggregate of
patients into related groups that engage in self-help, and provide support that
improves overall patient education and awareness of their conditions and how to
better manage their own health
Savings: Increased efficiency driven by improved workflow, better patient
management, and keeping patients healthy through engaged interactions. Hospitals
will see improved patient satisfaction scores that are linked to improved healthcare,
but also linked too more accurate documentation and coding of clinical conditions by
virtue of the increased patient engagement.
http://www.himss.org/ValueSuite
69. Nick van Terheyden, MD CMIO, Nuance Communications
Twitter http://twitter.com/drnic1
LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/nickvt
Voice of the Doctor http://drvoice.blogspot.com/
My Activity http://DrNick.vanterheyden.com
AboutMe http://about.me/obiwan
FaceBook http://profile.to/drnick
E-Mail drnick@nuance.com, drnic1@gmail.com
GoogleVoice (301) 355-0877
Questions
Where You Can Find Me
70. MasterChef in Healthcare: Integrating
Social Media
April 15, 2015
Nick van Terheyden, MD
@drnic1
DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily represent official policy or position of HIMSS.