Strata Rx Conference
Sept. 25-27, 2013
Creator & Moderator: @DrBonnie360
Presenters: Dan Conroy with Aetna CarePass, Anmol Madan with Ginger.io and Bruce Springer with OneHealth
Social Media Marketing Life Science Alley March 2013Elise Schadauer
Use of social media by doctors and consumers is growing. This presentation shares social media trends and best practices for medical device companies looking to dive into social media marketing.
ICanFunction is presenting an e-solution called mICF that aims to unite patients and their healthcare teams by allowing patients to manage and share their health information using a bio-psycho-social-spiritual model of health, and enabling healthcare professionals to interact and collaborate around patient cases. This solution seeks to benefit patients by empowering them to contribute what matters to their care, healthcare professionals by facilitating collaboration and communication, and researchers by generating improved insights from analyzing large collected data sets.
Social Media by the Numbers: How Social Media Impacts Healthcare and How Phys...RefluxMD
Social media use has grown significantly with over 70% of adults now using sites like Facebook and Twitter. Healthcare social media use is also increasing, with around 40% of consumers using sites to research health topics, find communities, and learn about procedures. Physicians can benefit from social media by using it to establish their brand, connect with potential new patients, and expand their role in managing existing patients outside of the office. This allows for more continuous education and support that can improve outcomes, especially for chronic conditions.
This document discusses the use of social media in healthcare. It finds that affluent younger adults use social media to influence healthcare decisions, with sites like Facebook being popular. Social media can raise health awareness, empower patients, and provide real-time information. While some view social media as reliable, physicians are discouraged from direct interaction due to privacy and ethical concerns, though sharing research is allowed. Recommendations include modifying privacy rules and appealing for social media support.
Why should healthcare professionals care about social media?Innovation Agency
Social media is important for health professionals to engage with because it can:
1) Improve health outcomes, increase value for money spent on health, and boost economic growth by spreading innovation more widely.
2) Many people now get news and information from social media on their phones, rather than traditional media.
3) The majority of people in the UK have social media accounts and many would prefer to engage with healthcare organizations through social media over visiting in person.
Social media can be leveraged by medical experts and patient advocacy groups to disseminate research and connect networks of "microexperts", taking an active model of sharing information through relevant, targeted, and accessible online communities and platforms. This represents an exponential leap forward from traditional passive models of merely providing access to information by bringing research directly to interested networks and empowering patients to learn from each other.
Innovating in Health- Austin Opportunity 081515Maninder Kahlon
This document discusses the opportunity for Austin, Texas to become a center for innovating in health care. It proposes creating a "miniature health ecosystem" in Austin that is more open to redesign compared to traditional medical school models. The key strategies outlined are to: (1) recruit leaders committed to care redesign and population health, (2) demonstrate value-enhancing health projects, and (3) use these projects to inspire and validate new technologies. The goal is for Austin to become a "health redesign platform" that can reinvent care, improve health outcomes, lower costs, and accelerate product development through new partnerships between academia and the private sector.
This document discusses new approaches to health care marketing and reputation management. It outlines a behavioral public relations model and explains how engagement is growing through the internet and social media. It also discusses how perceptions have changed, with patients taking a more active role, and the need to influence medical professionals. The document analyzes Baxter's campaign to promote peritoneal dialysis, targeting both doctors and patients, and using various marketing strategies including websites and videos. It emphasizes the importance of building relevance through visual content and being part of a larger "movement".
Social Media Marketing Life Science Alley March 2013Elise Schadauer
Use of social media by doctors and consumers is growing. This presentation shares social media trends and best practices for medical device companies looking to dive into social media marketing.
ICanFunction is presenting an e-solution called mICF that aims to unite patients and their healthcare teams by allowing patients to manage and share their health information using a bio-psycho-social-spiritual model of health, and enabling healthcare professionals to interact and collaborate around patient cases. This solution seeks to benefit patients by empowering them to contribute what matters to their care, healthcare professionals by facilitating collaboration and communication, and researchers by generating improved insights from analyzing large collected data sets.
Social Media by the Numbers: How Social Media Impacts Healthcare and How Phys...RefluxMD
Social media use has grown significantly with over 70% of adults now using sites like Facebook and Twitter. Healthcare social media use is also increasing, with around 40% of consumers using sites to research health topics, find communities, and learn about procedures. Physicians can benefit from social media by using it to establish their brand, connect with potential new patients, and expand their role in managing existing patients outside of the office. This allows for more continuous education and support that can improve outcomes, especially for chronic conditions.
This document discusses the use of social media in healthcare. It finds that affluent younger adults use social media to influence healthcare decisions, with sites like Facebook being popular. Social media can raise health awareness, empower patients, and provide real-time information. While some view social media as reliable, physicians are discouraged from direct interaction due to privacy and ethical concerns, though sharing research is allowed. Recommendations include modifying privacy rules and appealing for social media support.
Why should healthcare professionals care about social media?Innovation Agency
Social media is important for health professionals to engage with because it can:
1) Improve health outcomes, increase value for money spent on health, and boost economic growth by spreading innovation more widely.
2) Many people now get news and information from social media on their phones, rather than traditional media.
3) The majority of people in the UK have social media accounts and many would prefer to engage with healthcare organizations through social media over visiting in person.
Social media can be leveraged by medical experts and patient advocacy groups to disseminate research and connect networks of "microexperts", taking an active model of sharing information through relevant, targeted, and accessible online communities and platforms. This represents an exponential leap forward from traditional passive models of merely providing access to information by bringing research directly to interested networks and empowering patients to learn from each other.
Innovating in Health- Austin Opportunity 081515Maninder Kahlon
This document discusses the opportunity for Austin, Texas to become a center for innovating in health care. It proposes creating a "miniature health ecosystem" in Austin that is more open to redesign compared to traditional medical school models. The key strategies outlined are to: (1) recruit leaders committed to care redesign and population health, (2) demonstrate value-enhancing health projects, and (3) use these projects to inspire and validate new technologies. The goal is for Austin to become a "health redesign platform" that can reinvent care, improve health outcomes, lower costs, and accelerate product development through new partnerships between academia and the private sector.
This document discusses new approaches to health care marketing and reputation management. It outlines a behavioral public relations model and explains how engagement is growing through the internet and social media. It also discusses how perceptions have changed, with patients taking a more active role, and the need to influence medical professionals. The document analyzes Baxter's campaign to promote peritoneal dialysis, targeting both doctors and patients, and using various marketing strategies including websites and videos. It emphasizes the importance of building relevance through visual content and being part of a larger "movement".
This document provides an update on the development of a mobile application called mICF that allows for patient-driven assessment using the International Classification of Functioning (ICF) framework. It discusses ongoing projects to develop the frontend interface for users in Finland and backend linking of patient language to ICF terms. It also lists grant applications awaiting funding decisions for expanding the tool's use in vulnerable youth populations, consumer engagement, remote rehabilitation, and evaluating care for preschool children. Goals for 2017 include field testing a prototype, connecting different interfaces to collect ICF data, and piloting a big data model using existing ICF data collections.
Medical Applications of 4D Technology - Gaia Dempsey, AWE 2013DAQRI
4D interfaces enable rapid comprehension and thus more effective communication, making 4D a revolutionary medium for interacting with and understanding medical data. Hear DAQRI's unique perspective on delivering 4D solutions for healthcare institutions, medical professionals, and patients.
The live talk can be viewed here: http://j.mp/1550aFD
Canadian physicians and social media: a surveyPat Rich
The document discusses a survey of Canadian physicians on their use and attitudes regarding social media. The survey found that about half of physicians have a Facebook account but few use social media professionally. Physicians identified privacy, security, and time constraints as barriers. While most felt social media poses risks, nearly half believed it increases public medical knowledge. Younger physicians were more positive about social media's role in healthcare. The survey results will help inform new Canadian Medical Association guidelines on social media use by physicians.
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
In these slides, I briefly outline how the Internet is changing healthcare by empowering the consumer and the e-patient. We look at data and examples from the USA and Europe, and consider the impact of ratings websites, online health records, and the way in which doctors are responding to the e-patient.
Can you share your own health data to improve research? How can you participate in the precision medicine revolution. Are there new approaches to brokering your consent to free more data?
#ESCP2016 The Other Side of the Firewall: Social Media Developments in Other ...Marie Ennis-O'Connor
This document discusses how social media has transformed healthcare by empowering patients and enabling new forms of collaboration. It notes that patients now approach their health with greater self-efficacy due to easily accessible online communities. Experts acknowledge that the patient experience and perspective is invaluable for doctors, and social media allows unprecedented networking and information sharing between patients.
The Case for Social Media in ProfessionalismLee Aase
Slides for my August 19, 2014 presentation at the #TTHC2014 CME conference at Mayo Clinic - "Sustaining Trust in a Technology-Driven Health Care World"
M. Chris Gibbons - Health IT and Healthcare DisparitiesPlain Talk 2015
"Health IT and Healthcare Disparities" was presented at the Center for Health Literacy Conference 2011: Plain Talk in Complex Times by M. Chris Gibbons, MD, MPH, Associate Director, Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute.
Description: This presenter will discuss the use of technology and consumer health information to improve healthcare disparities.
This document discusses the ethical implications of patient-clinician messaging and measures healthcare organizations can implement. Some key ethical issues include privacy, access, effects on relationships, and boundaries of online practice. Healthcare organizations should ensure security of personal health information and that online and offline patients receive equal care. They should also implement policies that address informed consent, voluntary participation, appropriate uses of messaging, and recognition of online interactions in workload and compensation.
This document analyzes user engagement and post performance on the Facebook walls of 153 public health organizations from 2006 to 2015 using machine learning techniques. The analysis shows an increasing trend in user engagement with health posts over time. Photo posts received the highest engagement while link posts received medium engagement. Clustering the data identified that photo and link posts were most favorable for high and medium user engagement respectively.
This document discusses the concepts of meta-design, participatory design, and the maker movement in the context of digital health technologies and patient-centered design. It provides examples of how patients and caregivers have used open-source code and platforms like Nightscout to design innovations for diabetes management. The document advocates letting patients and caregivers participate directly in the design process through modular tools that allow for remixing and recreating of solutions. It concludes by thanking contributors to the continuous glucose monitoring in the cloud community.
Does feedback from this device change my unhealthy habit?Sander Hermsen
This document summarizes a presentation on using feedback from digital technology to change habitual behaviors. It finds that while 59 of 72 studies showed an effect of feedback on behavior, very few tested long-term or sustained effects. It also describes a failed experiment using a mobile app to increase water drinking. Most users never engaged with the app or stopped using it within a week. Sustained use required extremely high motivation. The presentation concludes that feedback may disrupt habits briefly but not reliably change behavior long-term without additional behavior change techniques and delivering feedback during the target behavior. Better evaluation methods are also needed.
This document discusses the use of social media in healthcare. It notes that social media can reach large populations and that its use is growing rapidly. The document identifies some key barriers to healthcare providers using social media, such as concerns about patient understanding, privacy, and access to misleading information online. It also notes providers' lack of time and reimbursement as barriers. However, the document argues that strategies like using visual/audio posts, closed/secure sites, promoting reliable sources, and social media managers could help overcome these barriers and make social media a more viable option for patient education.
Dr. Eric Moore - 2016 Antibiotic Symposium Review & Survey EvaluationJohn Blue
2016 Antibiotic Symposium Review & Survey Evaluation - Dr. Eric Moore, Director of Technical Services, North America, Norbrook, Inc., from the 2017 NIAA Annual Conference, U.S. Animal Agriculture's Future Role In World Food Production - Obstacles & Opportunities, April 4 - 6, Columbus, OH, USA.
More presentations at http://www.trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2017_niaa_us_animal_ag_future_role_world_food_production
O documento descreve as etapas de um projeto arquitetônico, incluindo a coleta de informações, estudos preliminares, anteprojeto, projeto legal, projeto executivo e projetos complementares. Detalha os objetivos e produtos de cada etapa, como plantas, cortes, fachadas, maquetes e especificações técnicas.
The document summarizes a trip to China, including a 24-hour flight, staying in a hotel with a pool on the 3rd floor, visiting an Olympic village and stadium where the author ran 400 meters, learning about silk at the Silk Market, seeing temples used to worship Buddha that emperors would vacation at, and seeing parts of the Great Wall that were destroyed.
This document provides an update on the development of a mobile application called mICF that allows for patient-driven assessment using the International Classification of Functioning (ICF) framework. It discusses ongoing projects to develop the frontend interface for users in Finland and backend linking of patient language to ICF terms. It also lists grant applications awaiting funding decisions for expanding the tool's use in vulnerable youth populations, consumer engagement, remote rehabilitation, and evaluating care for preschool children. Goals for 2017 include field testing a prototype, connecting different interfaces to collect ICF data, and piloting a big data model using existing ICF data collections.
Medical Applications of 4D Technology - Gaia Dempsey, AWE 2013DAQRI
4D interfaces enable rapid comprehension and thus more effective communication, making 4D a revolutionary medium for interacting with and understanding medical data. Hear DAQRI's unique perspective on delivering 4D solutions for healthcare institutions, medical professionals, and patients.
The live talk can be viewed here: http://j.mp/1550aFD
Canadian physicians and social media: a surveyPat Rich
The document discusses a survey of Canadian physicians on their use and attitudes regarding social media. The survey found that about half of physicians have a Facebook account but few use social media professionally. Physicians identified privacy, security, and time constraints as barriers. While most felt social media poses risks, nearly half believed it increases public medical knowledge. Younger physicians were more positive about social media's role in healthcare. The survey results will help inform new Canadian Medical Association guidelines on social media use by physicians.
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
In these slides, I briefly outline how the Internet is changing healthcare by empowering the consumer and the e-patient. We look at data and examples from the USA and Europe, and consider the impact of ratings websites, online health records, and the way in which doctors are responding to the e-patient.
Can you share your own health data to improve research? How can you participate in the precision medicine revolution. Are there new approaches to brokering your consent to free more data?
#ESCP2016 The Other Side of the Firewall: Social Media Developments in Other ...Marie Ennis-O'Connor
This document discusses how social media has transformed healthcare by empowering patients and enabling new forms of collaboration. It notes that patients now approach their health with greater self-efficacy due to easily accessible online communities. Experts acknowledge that the patient experience and perspective is invaluable for doctors, and social media allows unprecedented networking and information sharing between patients.
The Case for Social Media in ProfessionalismLee Aase
Slides for my August 19, 2014 presentation at the #TTHC2014 CME conference at Mayo Clinic - "Sustaining Trust in a Technology-Driven Health Care World"
M. Chris Gibbons - Health IT and Healthcare DisparitiesPlain Talk 2015
"Health IT and Healthcare Disparities" was presented at the Center for Health Literacy Conference 2011: Plain Talk in Complex Times by M. Chris Gibbons, MD, MPH, Associate Director, Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute.
Description: This presenter will discuss the use of technology and consumer health information to improve healthcare disparities.
This document discusses the ethical implications of patient-clinician messaging and measures healthcare organizations can implement. Some key ethical issues include privacy, access, effects on relationships, and boundaries of online practice. Healthcare organizations should ensure security of personal health information and that online and offline patients receive equal care. They should also implement policies that address informed consent, voluntary participation, appropriate uses of messaging, and recognition of online interactions in workload and compensation.
This document analyzes user engagement and post performance on the Facebook walls of 153 public health organizations from 2006 to 2015 using machine learning techniques. The analysis shows an increasing trend in user engagement with health posts over time. Photo posts received the highest engagement while link posts received medium engagement. Clustering the data identified that photo and link posts were most favorable for high and medium user engagement respectively.
This document discusses the concepts of meta-design, participatory design, and the maker movement in the context of digital health technologies and patient-centered design. It provides examples of how patients and caregivers have used open-source code and platforms like Nightscout to design innovations for diabetes management. The document advocates letting patients and caregivers participate directly in the design process through modular tools that allow for remixing and recreating of solutions. It concludes by thanking contributors to the continuous glucose monitoring in the cloud community.
Does feedback from this device change my unhealthy habit?Sander Hermsen
This document summarizes a presentation on using feedback from digital technology to change habitual behaviors. It finds that while 59 of 72 studies showed an effect of feedback on behavior, very few tested long-term or sustained effects. It also describes a failed experiment using a mobile app to increase water drinking. Most users never engaged with the app or stopped using it within a week. Sustained use required extremely high motivation. The presentation concludes that feedback may disrupt habits briefly but not reliably change behavior long-term without additional behavior change techniques and delivering feedback during the target behavior. Better evaluation methods are also needed.
This document discusses the use of social media in healthcare. It notes that social media can reach large populations and that its use is growing rapidly. The document identifies some key barriers to healthcare providers using social media, such as concerns about patient understanding, privacy, and access to misleading information online. It also notes providers' lack of time and reimbursement as barriers. However, the document argues that strategies like using visual/audio posts, closed/secure sites, promoting reliable sources, and social media managers could help overcome these barriers and make social media a more viable option for patient education.
Dr. Eric Moore - 2016 Antibiotic Symposium Review & Survey EvaluationJohn Blue
2016 Antibiotic Symposium Review & Survey Evaluation - Dr. Eric Moore, Director of Technical Services, North America, Norbrook, Inc., from the 2017 NIAA Annual Conference, U.S. Animal Agriculture's Future Role In World Food Production - Obstacles & Opportunities, April 4 - 6, Columbus, OH, USA.
More presentations at http://www.trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2017_niaa_us_animal_ag_future_role_world_food_production
O documento descreve as etapas de um projeto arquitetônico, incluindo a coleta de informações, estudos preliminares, anteprojeto, projeto legal, projeto executivo e projetos complementares. Detalha os objetivos e produtos de cada etapa, como plantas, cortes, fachadas, maquetes e especificações técnicas.
The document summarizes a trip to China, including a 24-hour flight, staying in a hotel with a pool on the 3rd floor, visiting an Olympic village and stadium where the author ran 400 meters, learning about silk at the Silk Market, seeing temples used to worship Buddha that emperors would vacation at, and seeing parts of the Great Wall that were destroyed.
The document lists the world men's club hockey team rankings as of December 31, 2010. It ranks 137 teams from various countries, with SL Benfica ranked first and LMR Alges ranked last. The teams are listed with their name, home country and league.
Nowadays, communication has been essential to people's daily life, business and etc. It spreads all over the world. As demanded, many softwares were introduced to enable communication easier and more convenience, such as Live Messenger, Skype.
CC Logistics is a privately owned transportation and logistics company based in South Africa that has been in operation for 18 years. It specializes in cargo transportation between South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Angola, and Zambia, catering mainly to the mining industry. The company aims to provide affordable and efficient transportation services using a fleet of various trucks and trailers. It prides itself on excellent customer service, safety standards, and on-time delivery through measures like driver training and vehicle tracking.
(Legado 2016) Capacitação em planejamento estratégico Dia 3Ink_conteudos
O documento discute planejamento estratégico e apresenta o modelo Canvas. Ele destaca três focos estratégicos: custo/eficiência, intimidade com o cliente e produto/metodologia. Também aborda definição de metas e o Marco Lógico como ferramenta de planejamento.
El Festival de Verano de Bogotá se ha realizado anualmente desde 1997, convocando a cientos de miles de personas para disfrutar de eventos culturales, deportivos y recreativos gratuitos. En 2015, el festival se llevó a cabo simultáneamente en 20 parques de la ciudad con más de 40 actividades para celebrar los 477 años de Bogotá. El festival es considerado un evento de interés cultural para la ciudad y social a nivel nacional.
This document presents a new user experience for voice services that aims to reduce the time it takes users to connect and communicate. It illustrates how the experience works, showing the various steps from connecting circuits to greeting and instructions, with the goal of getting users to the live conversation stage in under 60 seconds. It also references features like time shifting to allow asynchronous communication and using smart edges to determine whether connections are live or non-live.
Rio de Janeiro is the capital city of Brazil's Rio de Janeiro state, known for its beaches, samba culture, and iconic landmarks. Some of its major attractions include Copacabana Beach, Sugarloaf Mountain, Christ the Redeemer statue, Carnival celebrations, and its large urban forest. The city has a population of over 6 million people and is a popular international tourist destination.
This document summarizes the mission and goals of Arts Alive SDSU, which aims to provide arts opportunities for students and faculty at San Diego State University. It discusses hosting signature arts events, supporting curriculum-based events, and pop-up events to promote arts awareness. Goals include broadening arts awareness on campus, increasing attendance at arts events, expanding art-making opportunities, and integrating arts into the curriculum. The document provides details on events in music, dance, theatre, film, and visual arts to achieve these goals and promote future collaborations across disciplines.
In this presentation we discuss social media definition, social media landscape, social media facts and statistics in 2013, professional use of social media, use of Social Media in research and strategies for putting social media in practice, and lastly challenges, guidelines & regulations. Prepared by Yazan Kherallah
In this presentation we discuss social media definition, social media landscape, social media facts and statistics in 2013, professional use of social media, use of Social Media in research and strategies for putting social media in practice, and lastly challenges, guidelines & regulations. Prepared by Yazan Kherallah
The “Meaningful Use” of Social Media by Physiciansyan_stanford
1. The study aimed to examine physicians' adoption and use of social media to share medical information between oncologists and primary care physicians.
2. It found that email, podcasts, and restricted online communities were most commonly used, while awareness and use of applications like LinkedIn, Twitter and RSS feeds was lower.
3. Oncologists had higher rates of using more traditional applications and podcasts, while primary care physicians tended to use more social applications like Twitter.
This slides wer presented at the Medicine 2.0 conference at Stanford University on 09.17.11 and include data that was collected as part of a research collaboration b/w Bob Miller (Hopkins), Bryan Vartabedian (Baylor), Molly Wasko (UAB), and the team at CE Outcomes. This research was funded in part by the Medical Education Group at Pfizer, Inc.
The Future of Diabetes Management: New Technologies and Social NetworkingAaron Neinstein
The document discusses how social networking and new technologies can help improve diabetes management and care. It argues that digitizing patient health data, providing real-time access to data through mobile devices, and engaging patients through social networking can help create a more sustainable "learning healthcare system." This approach aims to empower patients, increase transparency, and better coordinate care between patients and providers. The document provides examples of how current technologies already help achieve these goals and offers clinicians tips for beginning to participate in social media and online communities.
ICEGOV2009 - Tutorial 4 - E-Health Standards in Practice: Challenges and Oppo...ICEGOV
This document discusses challenges and opportunities related to e-health standards. It begins with an overview of why e-health is important and the complexity of healthcare. It then discusses the need for interoperable health information and progress that has been made, as well as challenges that remain. The document uses examples like the H1N1 outbreak and physician reimbursement to illustrate issues. It outlines major types of e-health standards and examples of standards in use. It concludes by discussing the ongoing challenge of implementing standards and the journey ahead to make e-health and standards easier to use.
From personal health data to a personalized adviceWessel Kraaij
Invited talk at the health track of ICT.OPEN 2018, 20-3-2018
1. Related Data science challenges to Digital Health trends
2. Designing an infrastructure to support secure learning from distributed health data repositories, for personalized health advice
3. Supporting patients with rare diseases with patient driven research and the generation of new hypotheses based on patient experiences.
This document discusses several data breaches that have exposed the personal information of millions of individuals. It also discusses how over 12 million Americans have shared their DNA data with companies like 23andMe and AncestryDNA. While this can help medical research, it also raises privacy concerns about potential genetic discrimination and challenges with informed consent. The document provides recommendations for patients, practitioners, and stakeholders to help address these privacy challenges through practices like informing patients, limiting data use, ensuring accountability, and identifying risks.
Modern Privacy
Call for action for stakeholders to ensure privacy in healthcare solutions
Presented during the Modern Privacy Symposium at Bentley University in Boston on June 10th, 2019
Researchers and public health practitioners increasingly use Internet big data as data source. What are some of the ethical problems, and how should they be tackled? The author advocates the creation of a self-regulatory body of researchers, a code of conduct, and a notice/opt-out infrastructure, to avoid a public backlash against social media tracking/monitoring for public health, similar to the Facebook fiasko in 2014 (Cornell study).
Collaborative Digital Pharma Marketing: A Role Model for Asia Pacific Healthc...Len Starnes
The document discusses the growing role of digital collaboration in pharmaceutical marketing, particularly in the Asia Pacific region. It notes that physicians' social networks have over 3 million members in Asia Pacific, dominating the global market. The document also explores opportunities for pharmaceutical companies to partner with patients online to gain real-world insights into drug usage and patient experiences. It emphasizes that building trust with physicians, patients and other stakeholders through open and responsive engagement will be crucial for pharmaceutical companies going forward.
Leveraging the power of social media in healthcare researchInSites on Stage
Leveraging the power of social media in healthcare research, presented by Robert Dossin at the MRS Healthcare Congress in London (UK) on Thursday March 6, 2013.
European Book Launch - RSD Symposium, Oslodesignforcare
1. The document discusses using design research approaches to rethink healthcare systems and make them more human-centered. It focuses on viewing people as health seekers rather than patients and designing care as a service system.
2. Key points discussed include designing for primary care and recovery experiences, clinical encounters from the perspective of care teams and organizations, and broader healthcare systems.
3. Examples provided include redesigning care for atrial fibrillation patients and a project to improve continuity of care across different providers and settings. The document argues for taking a holistic, systemic approach to healthcare design.
This document summarizes a panel discussion on how social media can be used in healthcare. It discusses how most healthcare institutions now use social media, with oversight typically from IT and marketing departments. The panel explores opportunities for using social media to empower patients, identify insights, and encourage dialogue. However, policies must balance engagement with compliance and managing privacy and legal risks. When used responsibly, social media may help disseminate health information and reminders to patients, and connect providers to new patients and resources.
Presented by Steve Mills, IBM Senior Vice President, Group Executive, Software & Systems Group
Learn more: http://www.ibm.com/software/products/en/category/health-social-programs
Back in 2019, we saw investment & business opportunities to meet the large and growing unmet need in autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases. Despite being as prevalent as cancer and growing faster, these diseases are under-recognized, under-researched and under-served. Multiple specialty silos within healthcare systems means fragmented care: costly, wasteful and frustrating. digital tools can help bridge silos and fill gaps. Our vision of patient-centered, digitally connected interdisciplinary care holds up well, especially post-pandemic.
Personalized Movement Therapy for Chronic PainDrBonnie360
This document discusses personalized movement therapy programs for chronic pain patients. It begins by introducing Dr. Bonnie Feldman who has dealt with chronic musculoskeletal pain for 35 years. While physical therapy provided temporary relief, she found she needed long-term alternatives. The document then reviews various movement therapies like yoga, Pilates, tai chi and their benefits. It stresses that one size does not fit all and movement programs need to be personalized. It provides tips on factors to consider for exercise with autoimmune diseases. Overall it promotes integrating mind and body practices tailored to individual needs and symptoms for chronic pain management and improved mobility.
Chew on This! The Oral Health RevolutionDrBonnie360
Newest research connecting the oral microbiome to systemic diseases such as heart and lung diseases, cancer, autoimmune diseases, and even possibly Alzheimer's disease, has shed new light on the importance of oral health.
Joining the 2nd AIRS International Conference on Genomics and Microbiomics in Barcelona, DrBonnie presents new discoveries in research, technology, and upcoming companies focusing on bringing oral care to the forefront of health and well-being.
Oral Bacteriophages The Little Things that MatterDrBonnie360
Within the oral cavity is an ecosystem comprised of various microbial communities whose interactions, balance, and imbalance can determine the difference between oral health and disease. With recent research linking the oral microbiome to systemic diseases such as heart and lung disease, cancer, and various autoimmune diseases, it is important to understand the little things in the oral cavity that have large impacts on oral health.
Joining Molecular Med TRI-CON in San Francisco, DrBonnie presents new discoveries on oral bacteriophages—what they are, how they interact with other microbes, and their therapeutic potential to minimize oral diseases.
Visual Annotated Oral Microbiome Research BibliographyDrBonnie360
The oral cavity contains distinct microbial communities that inhabit different sites such as the tongue, teeth, saliva and gums. Oral health is dependent on maintaining a balanced microbiome, while dysbiosis can lead to diseases. Factors like diet, medications and lifestyle can disrupt the microbiome. The saliva ecosystem involves interactions between the salivary microbiome, metabolome and host. Changes in the oral microbiome are linked to conditions like dental caries, periodontitis and various systemic diseases through direct infection or inflammation. Spatial factors also influence microbial composition in the mouth, nose and throat areas.
This document discusses 8 foods that can support immune health: turmeric, ginger, green leafy vegetables, berries, flax & chia seeds, walnuts & almonds, olive oil, and salmon. For each food, it provides a brief overview of its immune-supporting properties and cites several research studies examining the anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects that contribute to immune function.
Joining Discovery on Target 2018 in Boston, for Targeting the Microbiome, DrBonnie presents new discoveries in research, technology, and upcoming companies. Most importantly, DrBonnie360 focuses on the oral microbiome--what is is, the parts of the mouth involved, and its possible relations to heart disease, lung disease, cancer and autoimmune disease.
Topics include: Oral Microbiome, Microbial Composition, Dysbiosis, Oral Health, Chronic Disease, Crowdscience, and Oral Probiotics
How can the Internet of Things (IoT) help us challenge the invisible epidemic of autoimmune disease?
Learn how healthcare is evolving in the age of connected devices, and how both recent and future innovations are improving patient experience & outcomes for those with chronic and autoimmune diseases.
Click through to view the slides from DrBonnie360's recent presentation at the Healthcare IoT Summit in San Francisco!
The Arthritis Summit: Find Your Personal Power to Live Better With ArthritisDrBonnie360
Become CEO of your own health! DrBonnie360 outlines a 2-step approach to finding your personal power as a patient, as well as getting organized, educated, experimental, and assertive, and incorporating digital health and self-care tools along the way.
Future of Immune Health at Stanford Medicine X 2017DrBonnie360
A growing number of autoimmune patients, frustrated by a passive care system, seek tools to manage their own lives. In sickness and in health, they seek tools to interpret symptoms, guide diagnosis, treatment, and lifestyle changes, and most urgently, moderate or prevent acute episodes.
How can we use these new self-management tools to empower patients, support clinical practice, gather and analyze data, and enable new approaches to tackle the spectrum of autoimmune disease?
Published here are the slides accompanying my presentation!
Exploring the Oral Microbiome: A Curated BibliographyDrBonnie360
Recent research points to the predictive value of the oral microbiome for our overall health. Explore the science connecting the oral microbiome with autoimmune diseases such as Rheumatoid Arthritis, Sjogrens Syndrome, Crohn's Disease, and Lupus, in addition to our oral health!
Click through the links to learn about:
Oral vs. Gut Microbiome
The Importance of Saliva
Oral Microbiome and Caries & Periodontal Disease
Oral Microbiome and Systemic Disease
Personalized Nutrition
Probiotics, Prebiotics, & Synbiotics
A comprehensive collection of our autoimmunity research done in an effort to help bridge the gap for the large and growing needs of the autoimmune community. This bibliography is a sneak peak at an upcoming white paper for the lonely voices of autoimmune disease.
Topics Include:
Latest Findings
Prevalence & Incidence
Immunology
Polyautoimmunity
Current Treatments & Therapies
The Microbiome
Data and Digital Tools
Causes of Autoimmune Disease
Prevention & Lifestyle Modification
The Single Most Valuable Legacy We Can Pass On — TEDxACU 2017DrBonnie360
Here's a look at our talk at TEDxACU 2017. We highlight the invisible epidemic of autoimmune disease and the various steps we can take to help the next generation fo autoimmune patients.
For the full talk see: http://bit.ly/2s3GRQ7
The Gateway to Health and Disease: the oral microbiome, autoimmune, and perso...DrBonnie360
Did you know, the health state of your mouth could influence and possibly determine the health of the rest of your body? First exploring the relationship of the gut microbiome and disease, at the 2017 Tri-Conference in San Francisco (Feb 2017), Bonnie explores the recent connections and research around the impact of the oral microbiome.
Carefully curating the latest research around the oral microbiome, autoimmune disease, and personalized nutrition, we present to you our hyperlinked slides. Enjoy!
Our Body's Immune System Starts in the MouthDrBonnie360
The document discusses the connection between the oral microbiome and systemic health. It explores how the hundreds of bacteria in the mouth, known as the oral microbiome, could impact overall health and disease. Recent research shows the oral microbiome may play overlooked roles and could be linked to conditions like cardiovascular disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and more. Personalizing care based on each person's unique oral microbiome is an area that startups are exploring to improve diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune diseases.
Reversing the Invisible Epidemic of Autoimmune DiseaseDrBonnie360
Now, more than ever before, is the time to address the autoimmune disease epidemic. With the convergence in science, tech, and patient demand, we can begin pieces the autoimmune puzzle together. With emerging tech, platforms and tools can improve care delivery. With your help, we can save millions.
Platforms for Chronic Disease Management at Health 2.0DrBonnie360
There are approximately 117M Americans living with chronic disease. Chronic medical conditions took 85% of all healthcare spending in 2010, and are responsible for 7 of 10 deaths each year.
During Health 2.0's 10th annual conference, DrBonnie360 brings her unique, digital health and chronic disease insight to lead a panel of innovators leading in chronic disease management.
Trust Your Gut: Data and Digital Tools for the Microbiome - An Emerging Field...DrBonnie360
Joining Discovery on Target 2016 in Boston, for Targeting the Microbiome, DrBonnie presents new discoveries in research, technology, and upcoming companies. Most importantly, DrBonnie360 focuses on the gut as an organ of immunity and its possible relations to autoimmune disease.
Topics include: Brain-Gut Axis, Locality, The Leaky Gut, Microbial Composition, Dysbiosis, Oral Microbiome, Personalizing Nutrition, Crowdscience, and Medicines from the Microbiome.
Company Summary Tables: Information in order of Indication, What, and How.
Saving Our Children: How to Reverse the Autoimmune Disease EpidemicDrBonnie360
DrBonnie360 returns to Stanford Medicine X 2016 on the Main Stage. As a champion for all autoimmune patients, DrBonnie's new goal is collaborate and work together to save our children from the growing epidemic of autoimmunity. Approximately 27% of children under 19 - and rising - have at least 1 chronic condition, and by 2023 $4.2 Trillion lost economic output will be spent on chronic disease. Will you join to help save the future?
Read the full talk here: http://bit.ly/2deRsEA
Stay up to date on the conversation by liking us on facebook: http://on.fb.me/1RZne2y
Official Stanford Medicine X Description: http://stanford.io/2c0a4DT
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Unveiling the Dynamic Personalities, Key Dates, and Horoscope Insights: Gemin...my Pandit
Explore the fascinating world of the Gemini Zodiac Sign. Discover the unique personality traits, key dates, and horoscope insights of Gemini individuals. Learn how their sociable, communicative nature and boundless curiosity make them the dynamic explorers of the zodiac. Dive into the duality of the Gemini sign and understand their intellectual and adventurous spirit.
The Genesis of BriansClub.cm Famous Dark WEb PlatformSabaaSudozai
BriansClub.cm, a famous platform on the dark web, has become one of the most infamous carding marketplaces, specializing in the sale of stolen credit card data.
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Industrial Tech SW: Category Renewal and CreationChristian Dahlen
Every industrial revolution has created a new set of categories and a new set of players.
Multiple new technologies have emerged, but Samsara and C3.ai are only two companies which have gone public so far.
Manufacturing startups constitute the largest pipeline share of unicorns and IPO candidates in the SF Bay Area, and software startups dominate in Germany.
Building Your Employer Brand with Social MediaLuanWise
Presented at The Global HR Summit, 6th June 2024
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Know what your zodiac sign says about your taste in food! Explore how the 12 zodiac signs influence your culinary preferences with insights from MyPandit. Dive into astrology and flavors!
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How to Engage Patients Using Data, Social Media and Games
1. Presenters
Dan Conroy Anmol Madan Bruce Springer
Head of Business
Development,
Aetna CarePass
CEO & Co-founder,
Ginger.io
CEO/President,
OneHealth
Creator & Moderator
Welcome, I am Bonnie Feldman, also known as @DrBonnie360, a provider, digital health analyst and business development consultant. Like all of us, I am also a patient. As the creator and moderator, I am excited to bring you a panel entitled Community, Platforms and Data- How to engage patients using data, social media and games. I bring you three distinguished panelists known for their innovative forward looking thinking: 1. First we have Dan Conroy-head of business development at Aetna Care Pass 2. Second we have Anmol Madon- the CEO and Co-founder of Ginger.io 3. Third, we Bruce Springer, the CEO of OneHealth
Have you woken up in the middle of the night with a burst of creativity? The idea for this panel came to me as one of those middle of the night bursts. How lucky am I to see this come to fruition. After practicing dentistry, then working all over Wall Street, in my first digital health research journey, Mobile Social Games for Health, I explored lots of fun dashboards: apps that use gaming mechanics and online social networks to nudge individual behavior change. Next in Big Data Hype and Hope - where I got hooked on understanding the workings under the hood – I looked at how data was collected, managed, analyzed and applied by users.
My Ah hah! moment in my research journey is when I discovered an evolving ecosystem of experimenters across the health/wellness and disease spectrum. After interviewing more than 125 companies, and attending more than 25 meetings over the last few years, I have seen how these mobile tools with 24/7 access can: Support self improvement Extend the reach of our healers Leverage the expertise of one to many Today, we will explore how big data is converging with the mobile social games revolution to enable new tools for personal wellness and disease management. Pioneering companies such as Aetna’s Care Pass, Ginger.io and One Health are using the increasing power of computational sensors and data analytics. Mobile devices, gaming mechanics, social networking and crowdsourcing is enabling pioneering companies, to create and use health data in new ways.
Social media is one of our new health tools. As we now all know in the wake of the recent NSA revelations: Our new tools include metadata: tracking time and place, through mobile devices and social networking. Unlike spying, in our field, I find a growing emphasis on positive peer-to-peer connections: using data as well as metadata. There is an enormous amount of primary data being generated by healthcare social networks. These online social networks offer elements of fluidity and flexibility not seen in the offline world. With no limits on geography or network size or number of networks - personalized networks can be custom-created, easily assembled and disassembled, depending on changing personal preferences and needs. So, social networks using personalized peer-to-peer networks could become useful external motivators for spurring healthy behaviors. Social media data can enrich the patient profile by adding lifestyle/behavior data such as patient-reported data, social media posts, socioeconomic data. Metadata fits here, too—activity, geolocation, timing…. Yet, people are complex, and influencing everyday choices is not a one-size-fits-all solution. As our panelists will explain perhaps the key is in a mix/match approach.
As the ecosystem is evolving so are the data sources. As you can see in this visual, health data comes from a large variety of sources and can include both structured and unstructured data. For this panel discussion, we will focus on the area on the right with mobile smart phones and social media, where companies such as 1. OneHealth and Ginger.io give real time behavioral data 2. Aetna Care Pass which has fitness data
Who is using this data and how? The big sources are also the big users, as you can see in this visual they include: 1. Payers 2. Providers 3. Employers For the purposes of this panel we will focus on the users on the right side of this visual: 1. Patients 2. Insurers 3. Employers
As a practicing dentist and then again during my research, I wondered what role can data play in closing the feedback loop that will nudge behavior change? When you think about it, everyone engaged in healthcare is in the behavior change business. As shown in this visual, for an individual patient or consumer a simple feedback loop can be described as: The user engages with the mobile tool; data is captured; feedback is delivered back to the consumer. This could be a simple reward system to encourage flossing your whole mouth one time per day. More complex feedback loops involve multiple iterations such as changing your sleeping routine or your eating and exercise patterns. On a population level, a feedback loop might be to reduce smoking or when the government has opened its databases to encourage more open data sharing. Ginger.io will give us a view of how they are using population level feedback loops.
The ultimate goal of engagement is to get us to take better care of ourselves, both individually and collectively. Engagement has been a popular topic of late, with HIMSS writing a book and doing a meetup while Health Affairs devoted the entire February issue to the topic. In fact, engagement has been called “the holy grail of healthcare.” What is interesting to me, as a scientist and provider is that is that no one can agree on the what it is .
In this panel, we will examine how CarePass, Ginger.io and OneHealth are using mobile tools and data to help us take better care of ourselves. On the dashboard, we will see how they think about patient engagement and how they are approaching behavior change using an active and passive data collection, elements of game mechanics and a variety of social support techniques. We will also dive under the hood to give us insights into the how they collect, analyze and turn their data into usable information today and in the future. It will be fun to see and hear the different perspectives, so get your questions ready.
We will kick off the discussion portion of the panel with some of the issues and challenges facing each of our panelists including: Privacy Security Data Sharing Timeliness of data Citizen Science Individual empowerment versus institutional resistance Institutional goals vs individual resistance