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Month: October 2008

Liveblog Health 2.0: Health-Management Tools for Consumers

What
sort of digital tools are available to health consumers to help them
manage the healthinfosphere–and [not to put too fine a point on
it]–their health?

Adam_logoKevin Noland, CEO, ADAM

iPhone app: the Adam Health Navigator. Puts personalized health
content on iPhone–click a body part on an image of the body, or search
for information. Essentially it puts commodity-level health information
on the small screen. Cool features, some geomobile-related some
leveraging multi-function nature of iPhone: Find nearest ER; prompt to
call 911; educational videos for conditions; connect to doctors in your
neighborhood.

David Clymer, CEO, MyMedLabMymedlab

Web-based tool lets you choose a lab test online. A physician
approves order instead of a doctor’s visit in real life. You can find a
lab in your area. The tools help you choose tests based on gender, age
and disease profile. Results interpreted by an MML doctor and put in
your PHR. Key detail: Results can be completely confidential.

Continue reading…

Health 2.0–Day 2, 3 Health 2.0 CEOs

JohnbushSo it’s Day 2 and I’m taking 2 minutes that I don’t have to comment on an amazing
morning.

Jon Bush from AthenaHealth was interviewed (sort of!) by Chris Lawton. He is absolutely hilarious — anyone who can have an audience in stitches about the 67 faxes each day that go into every medial office in America should be in politics! I wont say more but we’re really looking forward to posting the video.

Dan Palestrant talked with David Hamilton about Sermo’s big new deal with Bloomberg. Health 2.0 meets 280,000 financial analysts. And about Google Adwords not being a business model, and how that’s OK with doctors. (Although I keep telling Daniel, it is a business model for Google.)

Finally, Kerry Hicks from HealthGrades allowed Michael Millenson to tease out of him that if you go to a 1-star hospital you have a 70 percent higher chance of dying from a hospitalization than gong to a 5 star hospital. That, Michael suggested, might be a rating that really matters!

Sermo and Bloomberg announce strategic partnership

Sermo

Sermo and Bloomberg announced a new partnership Thursday at Health 2.0 to provide financial investors with instant access to medical information via The Healthcare Exchange.

Sermo CEO Daniel Palestrant said this partnership will allow investors to tap into the wisdom of Sermo’s 90,000 physician members. To learn more go here.

More news at Health 2.0

HealthGrades announced Wednesday that it will become the exclusive provider of physician and hospital quality information for Yahoo Health, which will incorporate HealthGrades data into a new search-driven directory.

American Well and ActiveHealth Management announced a collaboration to combine ActiveHealth’s CareEngine analytics with American Well’s Online Care System.

Private Access  and Envoii
Health announced a partnership to create online products to recruit
participants for research and clinical trials. On Private Access,
people can describe their
health matters and maintain precise control over who has access to the
records. You can set parameters for what people see and how you want to
be contacted.

Organized Wisdom CEO Steven Krein said his company will soon move into the physician search arena.

Engage With Grace

If there was something you could do to improve end-of-life-care in the United States, and it only took two minutes, and everybody did it, would there be a transformation?

Alexandra Drane, president of Eliza Corp., and Matthew Holt think so. That’s why
they’ve created "Engage With Grace" the one-slide project. Theoneslide

They believe that if everyone took two minutes at the end of every presentation to show this slide that asks five basic — but critical — questions transformation could occur. In times of tragedy, families would experience less anxiety, knowing their loved one’s wishes are being met.

Matthew and Alexandra ask that you download the slide, start a viral movement, have these conversations and transform end-of-life care. To learn more visit Engage with Grace, where you can download the one slde, register for free, learn how to start the conversation and store your answers to the questions.

Stay young, keep your brain fit

A spate of recent global news coverage on cognitive fitness and "brain training" reflects
a growing interest in innovative interventions to keep our brains sharp as we age. This interest is very timely, given an aging population, the increasing prevalence of Alzheimer’s, and the growing body of research linking a number of clinical conditions with specific cognitive deficits.

US brain fitness market: significant and growing

We estimate the size of the US brain fitness market was $225m in 2007 – more than double what it was in 2005. Consumers were responsible for most of the growth from 2005 to 2007, followed by health care and insurance providers. We estimate that the consumer segment grew from a few million in 2005 to $80m in 2007, and the health care/ insurance one from $35m to $65m, and foresee continued growth in both.

Continue reading…

Health 2.0 Liveblog: Consumer Information Aggregators

Five companies that are leaders in making consumer data, including personal health records, available.

Web MD: Just did a deal with Wal-Mart, making WebMD
personal health records and tools available to employees. Proof that
health technology adoption is moving “from the salaried workers to the
hourly workers.”

Comment: Includes a PHR for members to use.

HealthVault, Microsoft: Now has developed 90-plus
partners making products for the platform. Seeking to make it easier
for doctors and patients to share information. HealthVault launch is
part of a “long journey” in integrating information for consumers and
with healthcare system. Have created an “industry” around making these
connections happen. New partnership with Kaiser, integrating its own
PHR service with the HV platform. Process to copy Kaiser health record
to HealthVault is multi-step and multi-click box/policy agreement
process–not a smooth demo. Multiple sign-outs and sign-ins.

Comments: The demo failed–yikes. The conference gives him a “do-over”. . .and that fails too. Dude: Smooth it or lose it.

Continue reading…

Health 2.0 Liveblog: Clay Shirky

Author of “Here Comes Everybody,” NYU Interactive technology/culture prof: Health
2.0 keynote address.

“More is Different”: As groups aggregate, they create not just more
knowledge, but a different, more valuable kind of knowledge….this
affects healthcare innovation in three ways:

Information: Most valuable aspect of the Internet: “people.” Those who think about health information think of individual transactions–but the value is when people share this information.
Yahoo Groups, “the first social software,” illustrates tremendous
public demand for collaboration with others. “Wherever people trust
each other, the information will flow.”

Continue reading…

Health 2.0, LLC, Launches Health 2.0 Advisors

Health 2.0 Advisors is an advisory service formed by four Health 2.0 thought leaders:H2a_logobutton
Matthew Holt, Brian Klepper, Michael L. Millenson, and Jane Sarasohn-Kahn.

The new service, in close collaboration with Edelman, will integrate data from Edelman’s Health Trust Barometer in its reports to helps clients unlock value of Health 2.0.

Health 2.0 Advisors will offer a package of state-of-the-industry reports, on-site strategic workshops, and advisory services, with a focus on building value for clients. To learn more read the Press Release.

Health technology need not go to backburner during economic downturn

In the past several months, there’s been some wringing of hands and some
82pxglassofwaterpronouncements of glasses-half-empty concerning health reform and technology innovation.

For us glass-half-full types, here’s something to consider…

Roughly 15,000 physicians in the state of Michigan began to electronically link up this week. The new online service has been developed by Covisint, whose roots are in the automotive industry. Covisint’s client is the Michigan State Medical Society, which looks to the new MSMS Connect network to enable the state’s 15,000 doctors to do e-prescribing, secure messaging, and practice management online. You can learn more about the project here. Covisint is a subsidiary of Compuware.

The service will be live to all on January 1st and will be free to all practicing physicians in the state of Michigan.

Continue reading…

Ethics of the genetic testing marketplace

Dna

Fresh on the heels of the launch of the deCODE BreastCancer genetic test last week, Dr. Arthur Caplan, renowned director of the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics, said in an article for MSNBC.com that breast cancer gene tests are not worth the price.

If you are worried about your risk of getting the disease, or are thinking about getting a genetic test done for any other reason, talk with your doctor or a genetic counselor who can determine whether your family history justifies the expense. You may be surprised to find that you can make changes in lifestyle and monitoring your own health that can reduce your risk without testing.

Dr. Caplan even goes so far as to accuse genetic testing companies of corporate greed which, given the current economic environment in the U.S., is bound to send shivers down their spine.

With respect to deCODE’s breast cancer genetic test, it examines seven single nucleotide polymorphisms* (SNPs) that are purportedly involved in 60 percent of all breast cancers. Results from the test are given as personal lifetime relatively risk compared to the general population (specifically people of European descent). Other risk factors such as family history, pregnancy history, etc. are not taken into consideration when calculating a deCODE BreastCancer genetic test taker’s risk.

deCODE’s Chief Scientific Officer, Dr. Jeff Gulcher, responded to Dr. Caplan on its blog, deCODE You (a member of the DNA Network) and drew analogies between the BreastCancer genetic test and LDL-cholesterol tests. Anyone who is identified to be at higher risk of breast cancer (or in the analogy, high cholesterol leading to cardiovascular disease) would benefit from greater vigilance, more intensive screening, and possibly, preventive therapy.

Another DNA Network member, Dr. Steve Murphy at Gene Sherpas calls the deCODE BreastCancer test “hype.” Cancer Research UK also believes that “it’s too early for a test of this kind to be released to the general public.” Dr. Len Lichtenfeld of the American Cancer Society does not believe the test will “advance our cause in the fight to reduce deaths from cancer in a meaningful, evidence-based and scientifically accurate way.”

Speaking of cost, though,it seems that 23andMe customers get the better deal because six of the seven SNPs (rs4415084 was on the v1 chip but not on the v2 chip) examined in the deCODE BreastCancer genetic test are included on version 2 of the 23andMe gene chip (I checked using SNPedia) not to mention the other nearly 600,000 SNPs included in the 23andMe report. A 23andMe DNA test costs $399 while a deCODE BreastCancer genetic test costs $1,625.

deCODE’s test offers other bits and fancy algorithms for calculating risk to justify the price. But customers should be aware that there is more than one way to get the genetic data they desire. And that data’s worth can be hard to price.

*See the list of SNPs in this sample report (pdf).

Hsien-Hsien Lei (pron. shen-shen lay) is a PhD-trained epidemiologist and biotech consultant. She blogs regularly at Eye on DNA, where this post first appeared. She is a consultant to DNA Direct, a genetic testing company.