Opening presentation by Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0 at the Health 2.0 Conference, October 7, 2010 at the Hilton Union Square in San Francisco, CA.
Remixing Public Health: Tools for Public Health InnovationJody Ranck
This is an extensive outline of some tools, trends, concepts, platforms and ideas that we can harness to drive innovation in public health and the Healthy Cities movement.
Opening presentation by Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0 at the Health 2.0 Conference, October 7, 2010 at the Hilton Union Square in San Francisco, CA.
Remixing Public Health: Tools for Public Health InnovationJody Ranck
This is an extensive outline of some tools, trends, concepts, platforms and ideas that we can harness to drive innovation in public health and the Healthy Cities movement.
We're living in a present where a large amount of physical products are being transformed into software-based services. It's not just miniaturization. It's a paradigm shift: from atoms to bits.
This trend is accelerating at a tremendous speed, and the dematerialization of physical technologies, ubiquitous connectivity and seamlessly distributed sensor networks are driving humanity into a future where we will be immersed into a sensing environment.
What are the opportunities? Which technologies are already available and which are on the edge of disruption?
While mobile devices have improved efficiency and patient engagement while lowering costs, they’ve dramatically increased security risks. How can mHealth be safely implemented? View this slide show and learn:
• How mHealth increases security risks
• Where the greatest vulnerabilities lie
• How to improve mHealth security
mHealth: The future of health is mobileguestd78180
Dr. Bernhardt's presentation at the mHealth Networking Summit on February 4, 2010 in Washington, DC. This talk explore the role of mobile technology for health promotion and features the work of the CDC in response to the H1N1 pandemic.
Ehealth: enabling self-management, public health 2.0 and citizen scienceKathleen Gray
Invited presentation, Technology in Diabetes Joint Symposium, Australian Diabetes Society & Australian Diabetes Educators Association Annual Scientific Meeting, August 2014.
3 Round Stones at the New England Health Datapalooza Oct 3, 20123 Round Stones
3 Round Stones' co-founder Bernadette Hyland discusses a new mobile application that uses federal open government data about weather and healthcare to improve management of chronic health conditions including asthma and COPD.
Edwina Rogers, executive director of Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, began her presentation by highlighting the movement to advance medical homes.
With the U.S. being the number one in the world for the cost of healthcare and ranked number 37 in the quality category, something needs to change. Rogers discussed the broad stakeholder support and participation for the movement, as well as the incredible volunteer involvement. The four ‘centers’ include: the Center to Promote Public-Payer Implementation, the Center for Multi-Stakeholder Demonstration, the Center for eHealth Information Adoption and Exchange and the Center for Health Benefit Redesign and Implementation. Medical Homes will provide superb access to care, patient engagament in care, clinical information systems, care coordination, team care, patient feedback and publically available information.
Edwards explained that the Obama administration believes the medical homes concept is the best way to approach healthcare reform. The U.S. House of Representatives has showed great support for the movement and is helping develop and allocate funds for a five-year pilot program. She expressed her enthusiasm for the movement and her prediction that the medical home model is certainly the future of health care.
A complete version of Rogers’ presentation on the Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative is available online.
We're living in a present where a large amount of physical products are being transformed into software-based services. It's not just miniaturization. It's a paradigm shift: from atoms to bits.
This trend is accelerating at a tremendous speed, and the dematerialization of physical technologies, ubiquitous connectivity and seamlessly distributed sensor networks are driving humanity into a future where we will be immersed into a sensing environment.
What are the opportunities? Which technologies are already available and which are on the edge of disruption?
While mobile devices have improved efficiency and patient engagement while lowering costs, they’ve dramatically increased security risks. How can mHealth be safely implemented? View this slide show and learn:
• How mHealth increases security risks
• Where the greatest vulnerabilities lie
• How to improve mHealth security
mHealth: The future of health is mobileguestd78180
Dr. Bernhardt's presentation at the mHealth Networking Summit on February 4, 2010 in Washington, DC. This talk explore the role of mobile technology for health promotion and features the work of the CDC in response to the H1N1 pandemic.
Ehealth: enabling self-management, public health 2.0 and citizen scienceKathleen Gray
Invited presentation, Technology in Diabetes Joint Symposium, Australian Diabetes Society & Australian Diabetes Educators Association Annual Scientific Meeting, August 2014.
3 Round Stones at the New England Health Datapalooza Oct 3, 20123 Round Stones
3 Round Stones' co-founder Bernadette Hyland discusses a new mobile application that uses federal open government data about weather and healthcare to improve management of chronic health conditions including asthma and COPD.
Edwina Rogers, executive director of Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, began her presentation by highlighting the movement to advance medical homes.
With the U.S. being the number one in the world for the cost of healthcare and ranked number 37 in the quality category, something needs to change. Rogers discussed the broad stakeholder support and participation for the movement, as well as the incredible volunteer involvement. The four ‘centers’ include: the Center to Promote Public-Payer Implementation, the Center for Multi-Stakeholder Demonstration, the Center for eHealth Information Adoption and Exchange and the Center for Health Benefit Redesign and Implementation. Medical Homes will provide superb access to care, patient engagament in care, clinical information systems, care coordination, team care, patient feedback and publically available information.
Edwards explained that the Obama administration believes the medical homes concept is the best way to approach healthcare reform. The U.S. House of Representatives has showed great support for the movement and is helping develop and allocate funds for a five-year pilot program. She expressed her enthusiasm for the movement and her prediction that the medical home model is certainly the future of health care.
A complete version of Rogers’ presentation on the Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative is available online.
Shared By The Many: Advances in technology are allowing for the provision of affordable, decentralized healthcare for the masses and are lowering the barriers to entry in less developed markets.
The analysis in PSFK’s Future of Health Report has yielded a number of insights, the most evident of which is mobile technology as a catalyst for change. The mobile phone and connected tablet computer are allowing for the distribution of a broad range of medical and support services. This is especially important in countries with little or no healthcare infrastructure and areas in which there are few trained healthcare professionals. These technologies also allow trained professionals to perform quality control remotely.
Amongst the many significant developments is a shift towards one-on-one, in- field diagnostics and monitoring. Services that were once only available at a doctor’s office or hospital are now available on-demand through low-tech, affordable solutions. Personal systems allow for ‘good enough’ diagnostics that would have been difficult, expensive and timely to attain previously.
Using a basic phone with adapted software, a health worker can test for myriad symptoms - even cancer. This information can be relayed to a central medical care center where doctors and trained professionals can react to the data, provide prompt diagnosis and suggest treatment options. The ability to capture this data and get quick responses remotely means better healthcare, fewer trips to the hospital (which, for many means days away from home and family), and less time away from work.
A change is also occurring that is seeing increased access to and sharing of health information. This is made possible by the proliferation of systems designed to overcome infrastructure insufficiencies. these systems are enabling the broadcast of information and receipt of subsequent feedback in virtually any setting. From ‘town crier’ systems to ‘internet by text’, the collective knowledge found on the web is being made available to populations around the world who previously lacked access. The connectivity that is enabling the sharing of health information is also powering the growth of social networks focused on health and medical care. These networks are allowing professionals, health workers and individuals to connect and share knowledge quickly.
PSFK’s Future of Health Report details 15 trends that will impact health and wellness around the world. Simple advances such as off-the-grid energy and the introduction of gaming into healthcare service offerings sit alongside more future-forward developments such as bio-medical printing. It is our hope that this report will inspire your thinking and lead to services, applications and technologies which will allow for more available, quality healthcare.
For a download of this report - visit: http://www.psfk.com/future-of-health
Medicine of the Future—The Transformation from Reactive to Proactive (P4) Med...Ryan Squire
Medicine of the Future—The Transformation from Reactive to Proactive (P4) Medicine as presented at the Ohio State University Medical Center Personalized Health Care National Conference.
Leroy Hood, MD, PhD, is the president and founder of the Institute of Systems Biology. Dr. Hood is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Engineering. His professional career began at Caltech where he and his colleagues pioneered four instruments — the DNA gene sequencer and synthesizer and the protein synthesizer and sequencer — which comprise the technological foundation for contemporary molecular biology. In particular, the DNA sequencer played a crucial role in contributing to the successful mapping of the human genome during the 1990s.
http://www.systemsbiology.org/Scientists_and_Research
Dr. Leroy Hood lectured to a group of Ohio State University College of Medicine students and faculty on May 13, 2010 in advance of an announcement of a partnership between the Ohio State University Medical Center and the Institute for Systems Biology. The partnership will be known as
Presented at Healthcare CIO Certificate Program (Class of 2015), Hospital Administration School, Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Thailand on August 14, 2015
The Razorfish Healthware Report from Doctors 2.0 & You Conference 2014, including the section "Digital advance in the patient journey", with my views about omnichannel marketing in healthcare
Presentation by Dr Aaron McKethan, who's running the Beacon Communities project at ONC. This was the presentation he gave to the Health 2.0 Community in the webinar on July 21
The Path to Clinical Groupware. by Vince KuraitisHealth 2.0
Presentation by Vince Kuraitis (Better Health Technologies) about Hitech & the path toe Clinical Groupware. Given at Health 2.0 in the Doctor's Office, in Jacksonville, FL, Apr 24, 2010
11. We weren’t encouraged to ask questions, but to depend on the so-called experts. Not having a say in our own health care frustrated and angered us. We didn’t have the information we needed, so we decided to find it on our own. - Nancy Miriam Hawley (Co-Founder, Our Bodies Ourselves) 1970s “ ”
21. Internet Users: 1996 Europe's champion, Finland , leads with 300,000 Internet users—or 6 percent of the population. Ahead of Holland, Sweden, France, Norway & Switzerland Finland
40. “ ...Social software and lightweight tools that promote collaboration between... stakeholders ” - Matthew Holt and Jane Sarasohn-Kahn “ ... all the constituents focus on health value…improving safety, efficiency and quality of healthcare” - Scott Shreeve "health 2.0 is participatory healthcare... we the patients can be effective partners in healthcare .” - Ted Eytan
59. A Continuum of Health 2.0? User-generated health care Users connect to providers Partnerships to reform delivery Data drives decisions and discovery
65. A Continuum of Health 2.0? User-generated health care Users connect to providers Partnerships to reform delivery Data drives decisions and discovery
68. A Continuum of Health 2.0? User-generated health care Users connect to providers Partnerships to reform delivery Data drives decisions and discovery
69.
70. Big Issues Ethics & Culture Public/ Private Business Model Regulation Eco system Patient/ consumer
We'd like a World Map with pins at the following countries: Germany, Denmark, Spain, France, Great Britain, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and the US
Are these slides supposed to appear twice?
And companies were born..many with famously dropped vowels. As they grew an ecosystem developed. Lightweight technologies, component of sharing.
Internet users looking for health info in US from about 60m in 2002 to about 150m by 2008 Broadband users overtook dial up 2005 now in 55% of households This is the era of User-generated content, blogs, youtube, friendster, called Web 2.0 3 trends produce Health 2.0 --health bloggers --Search makes money (adwords) --SaaS
Vs. guidelines – doctors are bad at following them and patients are noncompliant
Lauren, we only want to see the figures from the total and the sentence on the bottom in big type “social networks are….”