SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Participatory Medicine e-Patients.net founder Tom Ferguson MD
Patients can help. Let us. If you remember nothing else… Takeaway #1
Meaningful Use must  include  patient access. Takeaway #2
Foundation Principles Patient is not a third-person word. The right of a desperate person  to try to save themselves The right to know what your options are The right to pick up your data  and pursue an option elsewhere
The Incidental Finding “ Your shoulder   will be fine …   but there’s    something    in your lung”
“ Textbook”    Stage IV,  Grade 4   Renal Cell    Carcinoma Actual illustration of Stage 4 RCC from Proleukin.com, with my additional lesions added
 
After the shock you’re left with the question: What are my options? What can I do?
E-Patient Activity  1 : Reading (and sharing) my data online
E-Patient Activity 2: “My doctor prescribed ACOR” (Community of my patient peers)
ACOR is great. I posted two messages tonight and got responses in 4 and 11 minutes. One responder also sent a private note mentioning Robin and Cathy. The other responder was Cathy. :) Through that list I've also found several other useful sites. Patient communities:  Responsive. What patients need. Virtually  no cost.  (Way cheap.  Not  free.)
Please: 1% for the patients. Patient communities do a whole lot of good  for a little bit of cash. Whatever we spend, let’s set aside just 1% to help patient communities help themselves. Note: this is an audience where you don’t have to motivate adoption. Time-to-benefit is nearly instant.
The treatment worked. Target Lesion 1 – Left Upper Lobe Baseline: 39x43 mm 50 weeks: 20x12 mm
What next? Pay it forward. Start a blog, to teach.
E quipped E ngaged E mpowered E nabled” Doc Tom said, “e-Patients are
Let patients help. You  will want to help when your time comes.
Lindberg (NLM): 400 years. “ If I read two journal articles every night, at the end of a year I’d be 400 years behind.” It’s not humanly possible to keep up.
The lethal lag time: 2-5 yrs The time it takes  after  successful research is completed before publication is completed and the article’s been read. During this time,  people who might have benefitted can die. Patients have all the time in the world to look for such things.
Lives are at stake. Docs are squeezed for time. What do you do?
Let patients help.
Industrial-Age Medicine The ability to create value belonged to those  who controlled the “means of production” (Doc Tom’s early vision of how access to information would turn healthcare on its head…)
Information-Age Medicine Internet access to the “means of production” (information) means all of us can contribute, create value, participate.
That’s  participatory medicine.
Doc Tom foresaw it all within months of the Mozilla browser’s birth in April 2004
So: will “consumers” pull for EMR adoption? Look at the citizen trend.  (Source: Pew 2009) Online   Broadband 2000: 46% x  5%  (54% not online) 2008:  74% x 57%  (26% not online) Regulate in 2009  for where the puck will be in  2020
False medication warning The hospital transmitted every condition I ever had, with no dates;  all were stated as current “ When e-Patient Dave pushed the button to send his data   to Google Health, what happened was front page news.”
Lesson: Unmanaged data quality produces trainwrecks
Takeaway: H IT needs to follow  normal  IT best practices Select an appropriate data vocabulary Don’t be “seduced by the readily available” Evaluate fitness for purpose Consider granularity (e.g. ICD-9 vs SNOMED-CT) Use established reliability practices for mission-critical IT  (e.g. audit trails, data quality practices) Test with real-world data before going live
Patients can help. Let us.
Meaningful Use must  include  patient access.
Enable Participatory Medicine Because health professionals  can’t do it alone.

More Related Content

PPT
"Gimme my damn data!" - e-Patient Dave's keynote at Medicine 2.0 2009
PDF
e-Patient Dave at Health 2.0 Sacramento 2015-11-10
PDF
Let Patients Help - Keynote Address by e-Patient Dave deBronkart
PPT
E patient dave salud2s july 5 2011 for upload
PDF
What e-Patients Want and Why They Need To Be Empowered
PPTX
Social Media, Big Data and IRB (E. Buchanan)
PDF
Failure to share data – both ways – makes medicine fall short. (NEHIMMSS)
PPT
AIDS.gov's Presentation on New Media Strategy for CDC's National Conference o...
"Gimme my damn data!" - e-Patient Dave's keynote at Medicine 2.0 2009
e-Patient Dave at Health 2.0 Sacramento 2015-11-10
Let Patients Help - Keynote Address by e-Patient Dave deBronkart
E patient dave salud2s july 5 2011 for upload
What e-Patients Want and Why They Need To Be Empowered
Social Media, Big Data and IRB (E. Buchanan)
Failure to share data – both ways – makes medicine fall short. (NEHIMMSS)
AIDS.gov's Presentation on New Media Strategy for CDC's National Conference o...

Similar to e-Patient Dave at NeHC 2009 06 02 (20)

PDF
"Patient Engagement is Changing What’s Possible" - Alberta Health Services ...
PPTX
BMC Kongress, Berlin, May 2022
PDF
Connected Health & Me - ePatient Dave - Nov 24th 2014
PPT
Authentic Value: Being Known in the e-Patient Community
PPT
Authentic Value: Being Known in e-Patient Communities
PPTX
NCQA-RIQI Pt Centered Medical Home event 7-23-14 (with font problem)
PPTX
Presentation to TraceLink's "FutureLink" conference, Nov 2018
PDF
The Imperative to Anchor Care in Patient Needs & Perspectives
PDF
Talk to Seattle Rotary, Sept. 24, 2014
PDF
"The Changing World Is Enabling New Patient Partnerships"
PDF
Doctors & Patients on the Same Page: #SIIM18 opening keynote
PDF
Patients as consumers: paradigm change required!
PPTX
AMIA 2013 convention - opening plenary (standing ovation!)
PDF
Mississippi Health Care Symposium 2014 - e-Patient Dave
PDF
e-Patient Dave's talk at NQF Annual Meeting Feb 13, 2014
PDF
CalOHII Transformation summit
PDF
Maine quality counts march 2015 e patient dave.pptx
PDF
Presentation to Merrimack Valley Section of American Society for Quality
PPTX
Mississippi Hospital Association 6-5-2014
PDF
e-Patient Dave IHS Best Practices Sacramento May 2016
"Patient Engagement is Changing What’s Possible" - Alberta Health Services ...
BMC Kongress, Berlin, May 2022
Connected Health & Me - ePatient Dave - Nov 24th 2014
Authentic Value: Being Known in the e-Patient Community
Authentic Value: Being Known in e-Patient Communities
NCQA-RIQI Pt Centered Medical Home event 7-23-14 (with font problem)
Presentation to TraceLink's "FutureLink" conference, Nov 2018
The Imperative to Anchor Care in Patient Needs & Perspectives
Talk to Seattle Rotary, Sept. 24, 2014
"The Changing World Is Enabling New Patient Partnerships"
Doctors & Patients on the Same Page: #SIIM18 opening keynote
Patients as consumers: paradigm change required!
AMIA 2013 convention - opening plenary (standing ovation!)
Mississippi Health Care Symposium 2014 - e-Patient Dave
e-Patient Dave's talk at NQF Annual Meeting Feb 13, 2014
CalOHII Transformation summit
Maine quality counts march 2015 e patient dave.pptx
Presentation to Merrimack Valley Section of American Society for Quality
Mississippi Hospital Association 6-5-2014
e-Patient Dave IHS Best Practices Sacramento May 2016
Ad

More from e-Patient Dave deBronkart (20)

PPT
Patient Activation Measure - e-Patient perspective
PDF
YES you should Google. Here are ten reasons. #Cinderblocks6
PDF
Superpatients webinar for Natl Network of Libraries of Medicine
PPTX
Patient Experience, Empowerment, Engagement: A Business Leader’s View
PDF
e-Patient Dave AF4Q South Central PA 01-11-2019
PDF
From “Let Patients Help” to “Get Out of My Way”: Why some patients want ALL ...
PDF
National Cancer Patient Forum: "What might we be overlooking?" (A patient's p...
PDF
How “e-patients” can help healthcare achieve its potential
PDF
Let Patients Help Improve Everything - including the science
PDF
Patient Satisfaction: the big clue to what works in the patient's life
PDF
e-Patient Dave at NCPF 2017-07-24
PDF
Opening keynote at AANP 2014
PDF
Šarūnas Narbutas: Why Patient Organisations Need to Be Trustworhy
PDF
Four Laws of Transformation (and three diseases)
PDF
Address to 50th Congress of Dutch OB/GYNs, Nov 18 2016
PDF
Enable the Rise of the Participatory Patient
PDF
Are you ready to partner with empowered, engaged e-patients?
PDF
HealthXL: "If you live long enough, the future changes"
PDF
"e-Patients are Changing Healthcare": Public keynote at NI2016, Geneva
PDF
Geriatrics is not what it used to be: "65" is not "feeble"
Patient Activation Measure - e-Patient perspective
YES you should Google. Here are ten reasons. #Cinderblocks6
Superpatients webinar for Natl Network of Libraries of Medicine
Patient Experience, Empowerment, Engagement: A Business Leader’s View
e-Patient Dave AF4Q South Central PA 01-11-2019
From “Let Patients Help” to “Get Out of My Way”: Why some patients want ALL ...
National Cancer Patient Forum: "What might we be overlooking?" (A patient's p...
How “e-patients” can help healthcare achieve its potential
Let Patients Help Improve Everything - including the science
Patient Satisfaction: the big clue to what works in the patient's life
e-Patient Dave at NCPF 2017-07-24
Opening keynote at AANP 2014
Šarūnas Narbutas: Why Patient Organisations Need to Be Trustworhy
Four Laws of Transformation (and three diseases)
Address to 50th Congress of Dutch OB/GYNs, Nov 18 2016
Enable the Rise of the Participatory Patient
Are you ready to partner with empowered, engaged e-patients?
HealthXL: "If you live long enough, the future changes"
"e-Patients are Changing Healthcare": Public keynote at NI2016, Geneva
Geriatrics is not what it used to be: "65" is not "feeble"
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Acid Base Disorders educational power point.pptx
PDF
Cardiology Pearls for Primary Care Providers
PDF
SEMEN PREPARATION TECHNIGUES FOR INTRAUTERINE INSEMINATION.pdf
PPTX
y4d nutrition and diet in pregnancy and postpartum
PPTX
the psycho-oncology for psychiatrists pptx
PPTX
preoerative assessment in anesthesia and critical care medicine
PPTX
NRPchitwan6ab2802f9.pptxnepalindiaindiaindiapakistan
PPTX
CHEM421 - Biochemistry (Chapter 1 - Introduction)
PPTX
ONCOLOGY Principles of Radiotherapy.pptx
PPTX
ANATOMY OF MEDULLA OBLANGATA AND SYNDROMES.pptx
PPTX
regulatory aspects for Bulk manufacturing
PPTX
Cardiovascular - antihypertensive medical backgrounds
PPTX
Reading between the Rings: Imaging in Brain Infections
PPT
Rheumatology Member of Royal College of Physicians.ppt
PPTX
1. Basic chemist of Biomolecule (1).pptx
PPTX
antibiotics rational use of antibiotics.pptx
PDF
Intl J Gynecology Obste - 2021 - Melamed - FIGO International Federation o...
PPTX
Acute Coronary Syndrome for Cardiology Conference
PPTX
vertigo topics for undergraduate ,mbbs/md/fcps
PDF
Transcultural that can help you someday.
Acid Base Disorders educational power point.pptx
Cardiology Pearls for Primary Care Providers
SEMEN PREPARATION TECHNIGUES FOR INTRAUTERINE INSEMINATION.pdf
y4d nutrition and diet in pregnancy and postpartum
the psycho-oncology for psychiatrists pptx
preoerative assessment in anesthesia and critical care medicine
NRPchitwan6ab2802f9.pptxnepalindiaindiaindiapakistan
CHEM421 - Biochemistry (Chapter 1 - Introduction)
ONCOLOGY Principles of Radiotherapy.pptx
ANATOMY OF MEDULLA OBLANGATA AND SYNDROMES.pptx
regulatory aspects for Bulk manufacturing
Cardiovascular - antihypertensive medical backgrounds
Reading between the Rings: Imaging in Brain Infections
Rheumatology Member of Royal College of Physicians.ppt
1. Basic chemist of Biomolecule (1).pptx
antibiotics rational use of antibiotics.pptx
Intl J Gynecology Obste - 2021 - Melamed - FIGO International Federation o...
Acute Coronary Syndrome for Cardiology Conference
vertigo topics for undergraduate ,mbbs/md/fcps
Transcultural that can help you someday.

e-Patient Dave at NeHC 2009 06 02

  • 1. Participatory Medicine e-Patients.net founder Tom Ferguson MD
  • 2. Patients can help. Let us. If you remember nothing else… Takeaway #1
  • 3. Meaningful Use must include patient access. Takeaway #2
  • 4. Foundation Principles Patient is not a third-person word. The right of a desperate person to try to save themselves The right to know what your options are The right to pick up your data and pursue an option elsewhere
  • 5. The Incidental Finding “ Your shoulder will be fine … but there’s something in your lung”
  • 6. “ Textbook” Stage IV, Grade 4 Renal Cell Carcinoma Actual illustration of Stage 4 RCC from Proleukin.com, with my additional lesions added
  • 7.  
  • 8. After the shock you’re left with the question: What are my options? What can I do?
  • 9. E-Patient Activity 1 : Reading (and sharing) my data online
  • 10. E-Patient Activity 2: “My doctor prescribed ACOR” (Community of my patient peers)
  • 11. ACOR is great. I posted two messages tonight and got responses in 4 and 11 minutes. One responder also sent a private note mentioning Robin and Cathy. The other responder was Cathy. :) Through that list I've also found several other useful sites. Patient communities: Responsive. What patients need. Virtually no cost. (Way cheap. Not free.)
  • 12. Please: 1% for the patients. Patient communities do a whole lot of good for a little bit of cash. Whatever we spend, let’s set aside just 1% to help patient communities help themselves. Note: this is an audience where you don’t have to motivate adoption. Time-to-benefit is nearly instant.
  • 13. The treatment worked. Target Lesion 1 – Left Upper Lobe Baseline: 39x43 mm 50 weeks: 20x12 mm
  • 14. What next? Pay it forward. Start a blog, to teach.
  • 15. E quipped E ngaged E mpowered E nabled” Doc Tom said, “e-Patients are
  • 16. Let patients help. You will want to help when your time comes.
  • 17. Lindberg (NLM): 400 years. “ If I read two journal articles every night, at the end of a year I’d be 400 years behind.” It’s not humanly possible to keep up.
  • 18. The lethal lag time: 2-5 yrs The time it takes after successful research is completed before publication is completed and the article’s been read. During this time, people who might have benefitted can die. Patients have all the time in the world to look for such things.
  • 19. Lives are at stake. Docs are squeezed for time. What do you do?
  • 21. Industrial-Age Medicine The ability to create value belonged to those who controlled the “means of production” (Doc Tom’s early vision of how access to information would turn healthcare on its head…)
  • 22. Information-Age Medicine Internet access to the “means of production” (information) means all of us can contribute, create value, participate.
  • 24. Doc Tom foresaw it all within months of the Mozilla browser’s birth in April 2004
  • 25. So: will “consumers” pull for EMR adoption? Look at the citizen trend. (Source: Pew 2009) Online Broadband 2000: 46% x 5% (54% not online) 2008: 74% x 57% (26% not online) Regulate in 2009 for where the puck will be in 2020
  • 26. False medication warning The hospital transmitted every condition I ever had, with no dates; all were stated as current “ When e-Patient Dave pushed the button to send his data to Google Health, what happened was front page news.”
  • 27. Lesson: Unmanaged data quality produces trainwrecks
  • 28. Takeaway: H IT needs to follow normal IT best practices Select an appropriate data vocabulary Don’t be “seduced by the readily available” Evaluate fitness for purpose Consider granularity (e.g. ICD-9 vs SNOMED-CT) Use established reliability practices for mission-critical IT (e.g. audit trails, data quality practices) Test with real-world data before going live
  • 30. Meaningful Use must include patient access.
  • 31. Enable Participatory Medicine Because health professionals can’t do it alone.