Categories

Category: Uncategorized

Health 2.0 at the CCR Workshop in San Diego and thoughts about Google’s Subauth, by Indu Subaiya

InduYesterday we attended David Kibbe’s CCR workshop in San Diego and learned lots about XML and the
utility of the continuity of care record in many different settings.  For more info about the CCR, read David’s posts on the topic – here and here

Over the course of the workshop, there were presentations by Rick Peters, the chief architect of the
CCR who has recently left a PBM start-up to look at several new
opportunities, Steve Waldren of the AAFP, Michael Rosenthal from Minute Clinic and Google’s
Jerry Lin. In the audience were people from Microsoft (Healthvault),
Qualcomm, Rediclinic, Patients Like Me, Edmund Billings from OpenHealth
and Michael Mee, who is working with Adam Bosworth on his new gig, and
a host of tech companies and provider groups offering or trying to
implement the CCR functionality respectively.

Google’s Jerry Lin sparked a heated debate about security and
authentication and whether username and password based systems were
enough or whether you needed 2 factor or 3 factor authentication.
Google’s subauth was pretty cool I thought although the open source
version known as oauth
is more likely to be relevant to apps outside of
Google.Continue reading this post over at the Health 2.0 Blog

What the Blogs are saying …

Adam Bosworth, describing life post-Google:

"Well, as some seem to know, I’ve left Google. And now that I’ve
left, that old entrepreneurial fever has struck me again and I’m off
working on a startup. Google is a wonderful company and I had a great
time there and had a lot of fun building something I really believe in,
Google Health, which I think has a great potential to change the way
consumers manage their health when it launches. Still, for me, it is
time to start a new company and I’m off and running.

I’ve been dusting off extremely rusty engineering habits and writing
code. Not elegant code to be frank. Just enough to think through my
ideas. Some extremely clear-headed and smart people can work out
everything abstractly in their heads and then just go and implement it.
I’m not one of them. Watching me write code is like watching an
indecisive sculptor work with clay. I shape it. I look. I wince. I
reshape it. I play with it. I wince some more. I ask my friends, nurse
my wounds, and then reshape it yet again. And so on. Constant iterative
development. It takes three tries before it is even close to the way it
should be, best case. I think it is totally worth it. The arguments and
design decisions are just way more concrete and tested."

Continuez

The Download squad on the impending PHR Wars

"This raises an interesting question. Are doctors going to want to sign
up for Microsoft, Google, ZocDoc, and other online services just to
communicate with their patients? It seems more likely that an
individual doctor or medical practice will pick one service and then
stick with it.

For example, if you take your kid to Fluffy
Bunny pediatrics, you’ll find that the doctors are willing to share all
of your child’s medical records with you over Microsoft HealthVault. If
you sign up for Google Health, you’ll have to get old-fashioned paper
records. Because otherwise, Fluffy Bunny doctors would have to spend
time submitting all of their documents to 2 or more different sites,
which would increase their workload, not decrease it. This, of course
would force health consumers to sign up for multiple services if they
want to make sure they have access to the latest information from all
of their doctors, meaning that you’re the one with a disorganized mess,
not your doctor."

POLICY: Taking Out The Trash-Talk

I’m up at Spot-on talking about a particularly crappy study that snuck into a WSJ editorial. I made some snarky remarks about the math skills of economists at the Manhattan Institute in the process. Of course after the editing process a Spot-on it all got a little smoother, shall we say

I’m not too worried that a Republican will actually win the White House in 2008. But I am worried that efforts by what I confidently believe will be a Democratically controlled White House to reform the U.S. health care system will founder on the free-marketeers devotion to faulty statistics, unsound analysis and, well, lying.It’s not a new problem. But it’s one that’s increasingly difficult to combat.

Read the rest and of course come back here to comment if you like.

Health 2.0 Research & Editorial Internship

Become a part of the Health 2.0 revolution! The Health 2.0 Conference team is looking
for a few smart, motivated students to fill unpaid Health 2.0 internships. The interns will work with co-founders Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya on all aspects of the business including the Health 2.0 conference, Internet media properties including ‘The Health Care Blog’ and a Health 2.0 blog, research, and consulting.

Responsibilities will include a wide range of research, editorial, writing, marketing, and event support tasks. The ideal candidates have an interest in healthcare, business, and technology, are detail oriented, Web and media savvy, with excellent writing skills.

Continue reading…

JOB POST: Director, US Sales

Wellness Layers Inc. has an immediate
opening for a Director of Sales to lead our US Sales. Wellness Layers helps the world’s leading
fitness, nutrition, health and pharmaceutical companies create private
label customer portals, which are tightly integrated with their services
and products.

The ideal candidate should be based locally within
the NY/NJ area and work from his/her home office and our New York office.
This is a role for a strong leader with a history of building and
leading successful enterprise software sales teams. You must be an
individual with an entrepreneurial spirit, extremely intelligent,
dedicated, and tough enough to work in a dynamic, fast-paced environment.

Your responsibility would be to focus on creating opportunities
and selling our unique Web 2.0 Platform product and services to large and
medium customers, focusing on the Wellness, Nutrition, Fitness, Pharma and
Health industries. Target contacts are VP Marketing and Brand Managers.

 

Continue reading…

A Patient in my own hospital by Paul Levy

Paul Levy is CEO at Beth-Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Paul was one of the  first CEOs to embrace blogging and continues to use his popular online column as a forum to express his views on the business of healthcare, public policy in Massachusetts and the challenges of being a manager in a very challenging field.  In this latest post he addresses a problem you wouldn’t think would be problem for a top manager at a facility affiliated with Harvard Medical School:  The very real risk to his health his job poses. He blogs at Running a Hospital

Two stories about being a patient in my own hospital.

(1)
I am really lucky to have a primary care doctor who knows how to
protect me, as president of our hospital, from our well meaning
doctors. Why do I need protection? Well, because the specialists are
really proud of their work and want to use any malady that I have to
show me their stuff. My doctor knows how dangerous this can be!

A
few years ago, I signed up for an ocean kayaking trip in Patagonia.
This was to entail pretty strenuous outdoor living and paddling all day
long for two weeks. The program therefore required a physical exam and
recommended a stress test for those over a "certain age." So I asked my
PCP to order one.

She says, "No.  I refuse to order a stress test for you."

"Huh?", I reply intelligently.

"Here’s
the deal," she says. "If I order the stress test, our especially
attentive (knowing who you are) cardiologist will note some odd
peculiarity about your heartbeat. He will then feel the need, because
you are president of the hospital, to do a diagnostic catheterization.
Then, there will be some kind of complication during the
catheterization, and you will end up being harmed by the experience."

Continue reading…

CONSUMERS: icyou goes to the Consumer Congress

Our friends at icyou (who by the way are doing a fabulous job with the forthcoming Health 2.0 DVD) are at the 3rd Annual Consumer-Centric Healthcare Congress this week. They have a raft of interviews with some of the smartest people in the pro-consumer care crowd (Michael Cannon and John Goodman), some people from technology (Sheila Mehan from WebMD) some from the old world of health care (Neal Miller from Kaiser talking about how to bribe people to go to the gym ($150 for going 90 times a year! and Bridget Duffy from Cleveland Clinic on patient advocates— Health navigation they call it )—all talking about consumer driven health care.

Continue reading…

assetto corsa mods