VDI, desktopconcepten en het nieuwe werkenRené Voortwist
Een presentatie die inzicht geeft in de geschiedenis en toekomst van ICT desktops en die daarnaast de relatie legt tussen ICT desktops en het nieuwe werken.
VDI, desktopconcepten en het nieuwe werkenRené Voortwist
Een presentatie die inzicht geeft in de geschiedenis en toekomst van ICT desktops en die daarnaast de relatie legt tussen ICT desktops en het nieuwe werken.
ONtdek wat de mogelijkheden zijn van mobiele applicaties en voor smartphones geoptimaliseerde websites. De mobiele marketing trend is geen rage van voorbijgaande aard maar een nieuwe realiteit die alles op zijn kop zet...
Opening academisch jaar medische informatiekunde AMCMartijn Kriens
Presentatie in het kader van de opening van het academisch jaar bij Medische Informatiekunde van het AMC. De rol van actionable data en het belang van ondernemerschap in de zorg
This document provides an overview of living labs, including:
1) A brief history noting the work of pioneers like Veli Pekka Niitamo and William J. Mitchell who helped establish the concept.
2) Details several "Orange" living labs located in the Netherlands, including the Amsterdam Living Lab.
3) Notes that living labs provide access to real-world users, data, and environments to support research, innovation, and business development.
ONtdek wat de mogelijkheden zijn van mobiele applicaties en voor smartphones geoptimaliseerde websites. De mobiele marketing trend is geen rage van voorbijgaande aard maar een nieuwe realiteit die alles op zijn kop zet...
Opening academisch jaar medische informatiekunde AMCMartijn Kriens
Presentatie in het kader van de opening van het academisch jaar bij Medische Informatiekunde van het AMC. De rol van actionable data en het belang van ondernemerschap in de zorg
This document provides an overview of living labs, including:
1) A brief history noting the work of pioneers like Veli Pekka Niitamo and William J. Mitchell who helped establish the concept.
2) Details several "Orange" living labs located in the Netherlands, including the Amsterdam Living Lab.
3) Notes that living labs provide access to real-world users, data, and environments to support research, innovation, and business development.
This document discusses improving safety culture in operating rooms. It notes that while aviation has developed strong safety practices like checklists and crew resource management, medicine still has weaknesses in areas like communication, checklists, and reporting errors without blame. The document advocates learning from other high-risk industries and applying principles like checklists, pause points, multidisciplinary teams, just culture reporting, and using data recorders to continuously learn and improve safety practices in surgery.
The Amsterdam Health and Technology Institute (AHTI) was awarded €7 million to become a new knowledge institute in Amsterdam focused on improving health quality while lowering costs through innovation. AHTI's goal is to connect people, technology, and information to improve healthcare value in Amsterdam and worldwide through education, research, and fostering entrepreneurship across a global network of "living labs" centered in Amsterdam. The city of Amsterdam has committed to a 10-year partnership with AHTI, including €17 million in funding and in-kind contributions.
This document discusses using a medical data recorder to improve patient safety in surgical procedures by collecting objective data. It notes that communication errors are a major cause of injuries to surgical patients. A medical data recorder could help address this by recording audiovisual data from procedures to allow for later review without relying on subjective reports. This would help identify issues and support systemic learning from mistakes instead of prosecution, with the goal of continuously improving processes and outcomes for patients.
The document discusses healthcare challenges around rising costs and inefficient spending, and introduces the Amsterdam Health and Technology Institute (AHTI) which aims to address these challenges through innovation, education and research focused on digital health technologies. AHTI's goals are to develop new technologies through a 'Living Lab' approach, train students, and translate research into applications and commercial opportunities to improve health outcomes and lower costs.
Martijn Kriens discusses the power of social media and its role in crisis communication and social influence. He notes the large number of daily users of platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Hyves in the Netherlands. He analyzes several case studies where social media played a key role, such as in political debates and elections, as well as in organizing unplanned events like Project X parties. Kriens argues this shows how social media allows for cooperation without coordination at large scales and influences traditional media. Social media is shaping new realities of how influence happens in decentralized networks of organized individuals.
This document discusses implementing a medical data recorder (MDR) to collect objective data from surgical procedures for quality improvement purposes. It notes that over 50% of operation reports do not accurately describe what happened and that most medical errors are due to communication issues. The MDR would collect synchronized data streams like video and audio to analyze objectively without blame. Key issues for implementation in hospitals are that the MDR must be independent, secure, only used for research and learning, and not connected to other systems or regulators. The goal is to surface errors and deviations from checklists and protocols to continuously improve processes for patient safety.
This document discusses improving surgical safety through systemic learning from failures and errors. It notes that surgery accounts for 60% of avoidable medical errors, costing over 125 million euros per year. Quotes are provided about the inevitability of human fallibility and the importance of being willing to learn from mistakes. The 1977 Tenerife airport disaster is examined as an example of an aviation accident caused by communication errors. The document advocates applying principles from aviation safety such as checklists, quality assurance processes, and crew resource management to improve surgical safety. It is noted that over 50% of operation reports do not accurately describe what occurred, and calls for prioritizing learning over prosecution to encourage transparency.
Presentatie Medical Data Recorder St. Anna Ziekenhuis GeldropMartijn Kriens
This document discusses using a Medical Data Recorder (MDR) system to improve patient safety and organizational learning in hospitals. It notes that up to 8% of hospital admissions experience care-related harm, with around 1/3 being potentially preventable. Aviation safety practices like checklists, crew resource management, and a focus on process transparency and failure analysis could help hospitals achieve 100x lower error rates. An MDR system could integrate video, sensor, and tag data to provide an objective record of surgical procedures and other care activities to support analysis without individual blame. This would help hospitals shift culture from focusing on individual heroes to organizational learning and continuous safety improvement.
The document discusses the rise of social media and its impact on society and government. It notes how social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter have become major sources of political discussion and for analyzing sentiment around debates and candidates. Two case studies are presented about large, unorganized parties called Project X that emerged through social media buzz in Haren and Arnhem. Various themes are discussed that are driving changes like scalability, direct communication, seamless cooperation and transparency. The role of social media in areas like crowdsourcing policy and new models of eGovernment and civic participation are explored.
This document discusses how communication technologies are enabling new forms of cooperation and connectedness on a global scale. Key themes driving this change include scalability through networks, direct communication removing intermediaries, seamless cooperation without centralized coordination, access anytime and anywhere through mobile devices, and increased transparency. These shifts are creating new paradigms where cooperation occurs without top-down control through networks that self-organize based on shared interests.
1) The document discusses how technology and connectivity have changed how the world works, moving from local to global and from centralized institutions to more distributed networks.
2) Key themes that drive change include scalability, direct communication, seamless cooperation, access anytime and anywhere, and transparency.
3) New models of cooperation are emerging that enable groups to work together without centralized coordination, changing how organizations and firms function.