Categories

Above the Fold

Wonder if your doctor is laughing at you?

That CNN headline grabbed my attention and got me to read a column that basically chastises the 17 percent of internal medicine residents who reported they had laughed at patient in a survey published in JAMA.

The author then goes on to express great relief that 94 percent of those who find humor in their patients considered it unprofessional behavior.

Lighten up! Of course, no doctor — or any professional for that matter — should laugh in a patient or client’s face or use humor maliciously. That’s basic human decency.

But humor is a release, and in a work environment as stressful as a
hospital, people need a release. Maybe that release should occur
outside the hospital walls, but funny things occur in stressful
environments and people do strange things that often merit a chuckle or
two.

Continue reading…

McGuire not in prison. Reyes is. Anyone understand?

So Bill McGuire has settled with CALPers in the scandal where he backdated the value of his United HealthGroup stock options. He’ll pay a $30m fine which sounds a lot but is a rounding error on his net worth. So it appears that his troubles are over.

Meanwhile Gregory Reyes the CEO of Brocade did exactly the same thing and he’s doing 21 months in the big house as well as paying a similarly big fine.

For that matter Steve Jobs apparently did the same thing too, and just today Apple settled with the SEC for a mere $14 million (or about 8 minutes of iPhone sales) and Jobs himself doesn’t seem to be paying anything.

Isn’t there something about equal treatment under the law in one of those fuddy-duddy 18th century documents we Americans are so keen on? Can anyone explain the rationale behind these differences in treatment?

Remember pensions? The big differences between Obama & McCain’s health care plans

This election is different than any other on the issue of health care because both candidates are giving us serious blueprints to reorganize America’s health care system and those blueprints are very very different.

As voters, you have a huge and critically important choice on health care.

There are dozens of details upon which they differ and for those I would point you to my comprehensive posts on the McCain Health Care Plan and the Obama Health Care Plan.

But to understand their big idea differences, I would point you to our pension system to better understand where McCain and Obama are going on health care. Back in the 1960s and 1970s, it was common for workers to have what is called a defined benefit pension plan.The worker got a promise from the employer that when retirement came he’d get a certain monthly benefit — often about 60 percent of his final average earnings. That might be $2,000 a month — every month for the rest of his life. Therefore, a defined benefit.

Continue reading…

No such thing as Free Lunch

I’m over at Spot-On today writing about a great new book I’ve read, "Free Lunch." Check
out and it, and, as always, come back here to comment. Here’s a taste of what you’ll find.

FreelunchFew of the books I’ve read lately have been quite as staggering as Free Lunch, from former New York Times investigative reporter David Cay Johnston who, heroically, made his career writing about – brace yourselves – the U.S. tax code. Free Lunch is a fabulous book by a veteran investigative reporter giving you his life’s work–a look at how corporations and wealthy Americans have profited, again and again, at the expense of you and me.

Johnston’s best known for his exhaustive investigations at the Times into how corporations and very very rich individuals subvert U.S. tax law so that they pay less to the government, while the rest of us pay more. But in this book – written after he’s free of the "responsibility" of being a Times reporter – he gets almost biblical in calling out the cheats, crooks and murderers.

Conference to explore innovation in health care

InnovationSecond Annual Innovation in Services Conference: "The Service of Health Care"
explores the innovations in technology, policy, operations and methods that address the deceptively simple question:  How can we improve the service of health care?

Panels of academic, technology, government and policy experts will  discuss the impact of information and digital service on patient care, considering such innovations as telemedicine, mobile services, serious gaming, personal health records, and Web 2.0.

Conference agenda and registration information are available here. A limited number of complimentary spaces are available for students and those with demonstrated need. For more information, please contact CITRIS at (510) 643-2217, or ci****@*******uc.org.

Using social networking to breakdown research silos

On September 4, a group of collaborators at Harvard launched a new website called Catalyst that is publicly available. I encourage you to visit it.

This site is remarkable in many ways. It brings together all the people, lifelong learning, and resources for the Life Sciences across Harvard and its affiliates.

In the People area, you’ll find social networking for the research community called Profiles.  It not only shows traditional directory information, but also illustrates how each person is connected to others in the broad research community.

Catalyst

Continue reading…

The never ending stent-bypass debate

A new study – a big one ($50 MM) – was recently released that compared the short and long term effects of drug eluding stents to bypass surgery for patients with serious heart disease.  The headlines — “Heart Surgery Bests Stents” — pretty much told the story.  In this particular case, 18% of those patients who had stents installed to treat their disease ended up either dying or needing another treatment over the next twelve months.  Only 12% of bypass patients ended up with complications or passing on.  The death rate in both instances was the same – 8%.

Stents — the tool of choice for interventional cardiologists — and bypass surgery — the technique of choice for cardiothoracic surgeons — have been playing this “which is better” game for almost ten years. Needless to say, both sides were represented in the stories that ran covering the results of this study. The bypass surgeons said, “More people should have bypass surgery instead of stents.” The stent docs said this study proved that stenting – which involves a much less aggressive and invasive procedure than bypass surgery — comes in a close second to bypass surgery, even in patients with complex conditions.

Continue reading…

Health2.0: User-Generated Healthcare 2008

October 22 – 23 | The Marriott, San Francisco

Building on the excitement generated by the first two Health 2.0
conferences, Health 2.0 User-Generated Healthcare promises to take the
conversation to a new level across an even more dynamic and panoramic
landscape.You’ll see action-packed demos of new services and
tools. You’ll see how these new technologies are transforming – and in
some cases not transforming — the healthcare industry. You’ll network
with more than a thousand other health care & tech industry leaders.

Wednesday, October 22nd

8:00am

Introduction: The Future of Health 2.0

Indu Subaiya, MD / Matthew Holt

8:20am

Keynote: Health Comes Everybody?

New media pioneer(ing) pundit Clay Shirky gives a new health-related talk

8:45am

Health 2.0 Across America: The Great American Health
2.0 Tour

See the premier of the new documentary starring David
Kibbe & a cast of thousands. Afterwards, David reflects on the new developments
he discovered across the country regarding Health 2.0.

9:30am

Networking Break

See the exhibitors and/or catch a sponsored “Deep Dive”

Sponsored Deep Dive from

ICW

10:10am

Consumer Aggregators — One Year Later

Jane
Sarasohn-Kahn reviews a major year of product introductions and
controversy. Conversations with, and demonstrations from:

  • Wayne Gattinella, CEO, WebMD
  • Peter Neupert, Corporate VP, Health Solutions Group, Microsoft
  • Ronnie Zeiger, Product Manager, Google Health
  • Mark Bertolini, President, Aetna
  • Michael Yang, VP & GM, Yahoo! Health

Plus some surprise guests and announcements of new partnerships.

We’re also really excited that Federal Health IT Czar Robert Kolodner will be a special commentator on this panel.

11:30am

Lunchtime Unconference & Launch!

The return of the popular Health 2.0 Unconference & the introduction of Health 2.0 Launch!

1:00pm

Search in the Long Tail & Intelligence in Communities

Much
of
the promise of Health 2.0 is in searching for and finding exact,
personalized health information content, especially for rare or hard to
categorize conditions. Much of that information is in social networks.
Matthew & Indu will introduce a new framework looking at the
evolution of
search into the long tail. Demonstrations & case studies from:

Search:

  • West Shell, CEO, Healthline Networks
  • Tom Eng, President, Healia/Meredith
  • Venky Harinarayan, Co-Founder, Kosmix/RightHealth
  • Steven Krein, CEO, Organized Wisdom

Social Networks:

  • Daniel Palestrant, CEO, Sermo 
  • John DeSouza, CEO, MedHelp
  • Bill Allman, GM, HealthCentral
  • Ben Heywood, CEO, PatientsLikeMe

Reaction and commentary from Gilles Frydman, founder of ACOR — the listserv engine that revolutionized the cancer community.

2:45pm

Breakout Demo  Panels – Session A

There’s
so much happening in Health 2.0 that we’re taking a deeper look at
specific technology and business segments in a series of demo-based
break-out panels.

  • Patient Social Networks (Part 1)

    Stead Burwell, CEO, Diabetic Connect; Brian Loew, CEO, Inspire; Glen House, CEO, Disaboom; Amir Leitersdorf, CEO, iMedix; Moderator, Amy Tenderich, DiabetesMine

  • Content, Navigation & Advocacy

    Abir Sen, Co-Founder, RedBrick Health ; Andy Cohen, CEO, Caring.com; Michael Keriakos, CEO, WaterFront Media; Kevin Noland, CEO, ADAM; Moderator: Josh Seidman, Center for Ix Therapy; Commentary from Orly Avitzur, Medical Adviser, Consumers Union

  • Managing Money in Health 2.0

    Christopher Park, CEO, Change:Healthcare; Stefanie Fenton, Director of Healthcare, Intuit; Phil Micali, CEO, bWell International; Chini Krishnan, CEO, Vimo; Brandt Cannici, COO, Medicare Saver; Moderator: Scott Shreeve, Crossover Healthcare

  • Clinician Social Networks

    Brijesh Mehta, Co-Founder, MedicalPlexus; Jason Bhan, Co-Founder, Ozmosis;  Moderator: Enoch Choi, PAMF/MedHelp

3:30pm

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

See the exhibitors and/or catch a sponsored “Deep Dive”

Sponsored Deep Dive from

Edelman

4:10pm

Breakout Demo Panels – Session B

  • Patient Social Networks (Part 2):

    Jay Drayer, CEO, Careflash; Howard Steinberg, CEO,  DLife; Manny Hernandez, CEO, TuDiabetes; Keith Schorsch, CEO, Trusera; Moderator, Amy Tenderich, DiabetesMine

  • Health 2.0 platforms for patient-provider communication:

    Jay Parkinson, CMO, Myca; Daniel Sands, Senior Director, Cisco; Yael Glassman, SVP, Marketing, American Well; Michael Gorton, CEO, Teladoc; Moderator: David Kibbe

  • Health Plans and Health 2.0:

    Joe Gifford, CMO, The Regence Group; Alexandra Drane, President, Eliza; Albert Prast, CIO, Connextions; Tony Miller, CEO, Carol; Moderator, Brian Klepper

  • Provider search, directories & ratings

    MaryAnn Stump, CEO, Consumer Aware; Daniel Kogan, CEO HealthWorldWeb; Cyrus Massoumi, CEO, ZocDoc; Spencer Punter, CEO, Emphasis Search; Moderator, Michael Millenson

5:00pm

The Business Case for Health 2.0

How
will today’s obvious social value and consumer enthusiasm be turned
into revenue for sustainable businesses? Scott Shreeve will head a
panel talking to payers, employers, pharma, media, and government. He’ll ask
where the opportunities will be and who’ll be writing the checks, and for what? Panelists will include:

  • Anna-Lisa Silvestre, VP Online Services, Kaiser Permanente 
  • Mitzi Reaugh, GM, NBC Digital Health Network
  • Ken Shachmut, SVP, Health Initiatives, Safeway
5:50pm

Day 1 Wrap Up

Indu Subaiya & Matthew Holt will keep you from cocktails for a minute or two.

6:00pm

Cocktail Reception

Network with your new (or old) friends, talk to some of the exhibitors, hang out in the Lounge, play games, and have fun!

8:00pm

Self-Organizing Dinner Groups

Unleash
yourself on one of the best cities in the world for eating — with
people who care about what you want to talk about. We’ll have a sign up
system for groups and book some great places for you to go eat at. If
you’re lucky, the investment banker or pharma company VP will pick up
the check (no guarantees!)

Thursday, October 23rd

7:00am

Breakfast & catch a sponsored “Deep Dive”

 

8:00am

Introduction to Day 2 & Recap

Indu Subaiya, MD / Matthew Holt

8:15am

3 Health 2.0 CEOs

3
CEOs from companies transforming, and being transformed by, Health 2.0,
talk about the future of their businesses. Conversations with Jonathan
Bush, (AthenaHealth), Kerry Hicks, (HealthGrades) & Daniel
Palestrant (Sermo).

9:00am

Health 2.0 Around the World

Outside
of the US, Health 2.0 is taking off. James Matthews–global citizen and
VP of Biz Dev at Sage Software–will take you on a tour of examples from
Europe, Asia and the developing world where Health 2.0 tools and
technologies are making a big difference. Panelists will include:

  • Paul Meyer, CEO, Voxiva 
  • Thomas Liedtke, Head of Emerging Healthcare, ICW AG
  • Marlene Winfield, SVP, Healthspace, NHS Connecting for Health
  • David Webster, IDEO
10:00am

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

See the exhibitors and/or catch a sponsored “Deep Dive”

10:45am

Tools for Consumers

Along with search and community, tools are the “third leg” of the Health 2.0
stool. While they have historically been the least developed, they are now much more sophisticated and have great potential to
fundamentally change care. Indu & Matthew will introduce a new model for
understanding tools within the Health 2.0 context, and look at their
ability to offer personalized information and enable decisions and transactions. We’ll be
showing the best tools in clinical decision support, diagnostics and
financial management.

Panelists will include:

  • Roy Schoenberg, CEO, American Well 
  • Michael Cho, CEO, DestinationRx
  • Adam Bosworth, CEO, Keas
  • Marlene Beggelman, CEO, Enhanced Medical Decisions
  • Stefanie Fenton, Director of Healthcare, Intuit

…and many special guests and surprises

Panel Sponsored by

Health Grades

12:00pm

Lunch

1:30pm

Getting Past the Privacy Conundrum

The
Markle Foundation’s Josh Lemieux leads a discussion about how the
issues of privacy, confidentiality and security will impact consumer
confidence in Health 2.0. But more importantly, we’ll be demonstrating
several solutions to get us past the privacy conundrum.

2:30pm

Breakout Demo Panels – Session C

  • Wellness 2.0

      Fred Goldstein, President & COO, US Preventive Medicine; Henry Albrecht, CEO, Limeade; Amir Kishon, CEO, Wellness layers; Moderator, Jeremy Nobel

    Sponsored by

    Physic Ventures

  • Genomics online

      Linda Avey, Co-CEO, 23andMe; Mari Baker, CEO, Navigenics; Moderator, Greg Simons, Faster Cures

  • Pharmacy and medication management

      Peter Ax, CEO, Kwikmed; Eric Zimmerman, Chief Innovation Officer, Mirixa; Rick Noffsinger, CEO, SafeMed; Sean Teare, President, InnovationRx. Moderator, Jane Sarasohn-Kahn, THINK-Health

  • Search (Part 1)

      Alain Rappaport, GM, Health Search, Microsoft Health Solutions; Venky, Harinaryan, Co-Founder, Kosmix/RightHealth; Rishi Sikka, CMO, Praxeon; Steven Krein, CEO, Organized Wisdom;  Moderator, Craig Stoltz

3:15pm

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

See the exhibitors and/or catch a sponsored “Deep Dive”

4:00pm

Breakout Demo Panels- Session D

  • Pharma and Health 2.0

    Andrew Levitt, CEO, HealthTalker; Kerry Hicks, CEO, HealthGrades; Jeff Shrager, CTO; CollabRx; Meredith Abreu, VP, Manhattan Research; Moderator, Jane Sarasohn-Kahn, THINK-Health

  • Gaming in Health Care

    Richard Buday, CEO, ArchImage; Paul Puopolo, Humana; Richard Tate, Director, Communications & Marketing, HopeLab; Michael Cole,  Fitbrains; Moderator, Doug Goldstein, Gaming4Health

  • Disease Management 2.0

    Stan Nowak, CEO, Silverlink; Ileana Welte, SVP, Health Hero Network; Neal Kaufman, CEO, Diabetes Prevention Source; Don Kemper, CEO, Healthwise; Moderator, Joseph Kvedar, Center for Connected Health

  • Search (Part 2)

    Tom Eng, President & Founder, Healia/Meredith Corp.; West Shell, CEO, Healthline Networks; Laird Kelly, CEO, RSIFocalSearch; Riza Berkan, Co-Founder & CEO, Hakia;  Moderator, Craig Stoltz

4:50pm

Looking ahead—The Business and Society of Health 2.0

As
is now “traditional” the conference will close with speculation,
commentary and forecasts from a stellar panel, while taking lots of
time for participation from the audience and community. Noted analyst Brian Klepper will marshal proceedings amongst:

  • Rob Kolodner, National Coordinator, ONCHIT 
  • David Kibbe,  Senior Advisor, AAFP
  • David Lansky, CEO, Pacific Business Group on Health
  • Alan Greene, Founder of Drgreene.com & CMO, ADAM
5:45pm

Conference Wrap Up

Indu
Subaiya & Matthew Holt will keep you from cocktails for just more
than a minute or two while we get reactions to two intense days of
scanning the waterfront of Health 2.0

6:00pm

Cocktails

Network
among the exhibitors, hang out in the Lounge, play games, and have fun!
You won’t get this chance again until the next Health 2.0 Conference!

Also at Health 2.0

You’ll also see and/or
take part in the following special features, with more to be announced:

  • The Health 2.0 Unconference (the audience favorite from the last two conferences)
  • Health 2.0 Launch! — special introduction of new companies and new products
  • IDEO will run another great design workshop
  • And you can relax in the Health 2.0 Experiential Lounge, with games and demonstrations.

(Agenda is subject to change)

Person Greg Simons
Right click for SmartMenu shortcuts

Making Medical School More Affordable

Always a trailblazer, The Mayo Clinic’s Medical School has had a generous scholarship program for the past 20 years that enables about 60 percent of its students to attend school tuition-free. The 50 students who started at Mayo last summer each received $25,000 to use towards tuition of $29,200. Students also are eligible to receive an additional $2,000 to $5,000 a year based on need, said David Dahlen, director of student financial aid at Mayo, based in Rochester, Minn.

Now, a few other schools are experimenting with much-needed financial relief for medical students. Most notably, the University of Central Florida’s brand new med school is offering four-year scholarships for tuition, fees and living expenses for every member of first-year class.  Students have until December to apply; already, the school has received 2,996 applications for its charter class of 40.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the $7 million needed to fund the charter class came from individuals and private philanthropies. There was no single donor who did most of the work; the two largest gifts were each a bit over $300,000. Perhaps other medical schools could follow this model.

Continue reading…

Around the Web in 60 Seconds (Or Less)

Associated Press: Only 2 percent of medical students plan on going into primary care, according to survey published today in JAMA (subscription required). "I didn’t want to fight the insurance companies," said Dr. Jason Shipman, 36, a radiology resident at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., who is carrying $150,000 in student debt.

Scientific Blogging: Do you go through withdrawal if you haven’t checked your email in more than eight hours? You may be addicted to the Internet. "According to Dr. Louise Nadeau, a professor in the Department of
Psychology at the University of Montreal, mental health professionals
now have a new affliction to face: Internet addiction."

NYT Magazine: For better or for worse, social networking sites and microblogging via Twitter have increased the level of ambient awareness we have about our friends and acquaintances. "The growth of ambient intimacy can seem like modern narcissism taken to
a new, supermetabolic extreme — the ultimate expression of a generation
of celebrity-addled youths who believe their every utterance is
fascinating and ought to be shared with the world," Clive Thompson reports.

Sacramento Bee: California lawmakers still haven’t agreed on a new state budget nearly three months after it was due, making this the longest stalemate in state history. Can you say complete political failure?

Arizona Republic: Arizona’s smoking ban had little to no negative financial impact on the state’s bars and restaurants. The ban went into effect in May 2007.

The Olympian: As Washingon state debates a ballot initiative to allow euthanasia, it’s looking for guidance to the south at Oregon — the only state to allow physician-assisted suicide. "Those who choose to use legal, lethal drugs to end their lives
typically are cancer patients who are white, educated and have private
insurance," the Olympian reports.

BBC: Experts are worried about rising rates of antibiotic resistance among multiple pathogens.

assetto corsa mods