The document discusses trends in healthcare including user-generated healthcare, consumers connecting directly with providers, and partnerships to reform healthcare delivery. It focuses on four main topics: wellness 2.0 and prevention through exercise and food; making healthcare cheaper by focusing on high-cost patients, accountable care models, and paying for outcomes; connecting consumers to providers; and the evolution of research through open data, real-time data capture, and crowdsourced information. Data is seen as driving decisions and discovery.
Shared By The Many: Advances in technology are allowing for the provision of affordable, decentralized healthcare for the masses and are lowering the barriers to entry in less developed markets.
The analysis in PSFK’s Future of Health Report has yielded a number of insights, the most evident of which is mobile technology as a catalyst for change. The mobile phone and connected tablet computer are allowing for the distribution of a broad range of medical and support services. This is especially important in countries with little or no healthcare infrastructure and areas in which there are few trained healthcare professionals. These technologies also allow trained professionals to perform quality control remotely.
Amongst the many significant developments is a shift towards one-on-one, in- field diagnostics and monitoring. Services that were once only available at a doctor’s office or hospital are now available on-demand through low-tech, affordable solutions. Personal systems allow for ‘good enough’ diagnostics that would have been difficult, expensive and timely to attain previously.
Using a basic phone with adapted software, a health worker can test for myriad symptoms - even cancer. This information can be relayed to a central medical care center where doctors and trained professionals can react to the data, provide prompt diagnosis and suggest treatment options. The ability to capture this data and get quick responses remotely means better healthcare, fewer trips to the hospital (which, for many means days away from home and family), and less time away from work.
A change is also occurring that is seeing increased access to and sharing of health information. This is made possible by the proliferation of systems designed to overcome infrastructure insufficiencies. these systems are enabling the broadcast of information and receipt of subsequent feedback in virtually any setting. From ‘town crier’ systems to ‘internet by text’, the collective knowledge found on the web is being made available to populations around the world who previously lacked access. The connectivity that is enabling the sharing of health information is also powering the growth of social networks focused on health and medical care. These networks are allowing professionals, health workers and individuals to connect and share knowledge quickly.
PSFK’s Future of Health Report details 15 trends that will impact health and wellness around the world. Simple advances such as off-the-grid energy and the introduction of gaming into healthcare service offerings sit alongside more future-forward developments such as bio-medical printing. It is our hope that this report will inspire your thinking and lead to services, applications and technologies which will allow for more available, quality healthcare.
For a download of this report - visit: http://www.psfk.com/future-of-health
The future of healthcare: when mobile disappearsMatteo Penzo
In today’s digital world, mobile devices are the powerful bridges between a connected ecosystem of healthcare professionals, caregivers and patients. New developments in big data, wearable sensors and the application of social layers are shifting an industry that used to focus on curing diseases to one that emphasizes health and wellness. But the mass adoption of connected healthcare will only happen when solutions are designed to be intuitive and technologies are forgotten. The future of healthcare will happen when mobile disappears into the background, placing the patient in the center and in control of their lives.
Large amount of data is generated in Healthcare.Big data predicts epidemics,cure diseases and thus identifies problems before they even occur.Big data plays vital role in health care sector.
The document discusses empowering healthcare through technology that is safe, works for everyone, and leaves no one behind. It describes how digital technologies are disrupting traditional healthcare models and outlines opportunities to enhance patient and provider experiences through virtual care, remote monitoring, and analytics. Key goals are mentioned like reducing readmissions, increasing effectiveness, and improving clinical productivity. The future of healthcare is envisioned as personalized, connected, data-driven, and empowering every person and organization to achieve more through technology.
HxRefactored 2015: MediSafe "Cloud-Synced Medication Management for Patients ...HxRefactored
MediSafe introduces their medication
management solution cloud-synced mobile app designed to help people integrate healthier behaviour into their daily lives.
Digital Health Disruption - Consumerization Transforms HealthcaremyNEXT
Digital Health is transforming healthcare as we know it. Sensors, mobile devices, online marketplaces, big data analytics, and internet tools & services empower consumers/patients to take their health into their own hands. Disruptive change has consumerized many products and industries in the past: photocopiers, PC, and refrigerators. The same is happening in healthcare now.
A look at SxSW Health 2015 through the eyes of the online health ecosystemW2O Group
Presentation shared as a part of the Mayo Clinic Social Media Health Network's monthly webinar for April, 2015. A look at the trends and topics that captured the hearts and minds of the global online health ecosystem.
The document discusses Draper & Dash, a UK-based healthcare technology company that provides data analytics applications and professional services to help healthcare organizations improve quality, safety, and efficiency. Some key points:
- Draper & Dash has over 22 clinical, operational and corporate healthcare data analytics applications.
- Their applications provide real-time visualization of key metrics like operating room utilization, mortality rates, and more to help hospitals identify areas for improvement.
- Over 40 hospitals in the UK, Australia, and Ireland use Draper & Dash's products, and the company expects revenue to triple in 2015 as it expands into new territories and releases new mobile applications.
- A case study highlights how The Royal Melbourne Hospital in
But Does It Work? The Critical Role of Evaluation in Digital HealthDustin DiTommaso
KEYNOTE AT HxD 2021.
Overall Message:
A. Effectiveness is the most important differentiator between digital health offerings
B. Everyone in digital health should be evaluating their offerings
3 Key Takeaways:
1. We are rapidly moving towards effectiveness as the key differentiator in digital health
2. Apps need to be evaluated throughout the design process
3. There are things you can and should do now to make your life easier and Your apps better
Find out more inside!
Ashley Schramm has over 7 years of experience as a biomedical engineer working for the VA. She received her Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering from Wright State University in 2013. In her current role at the WJB Dorn VA Medical Center since 2015, some of her key responsibilities include managing the medical device network, performing telehealth audits, organizing equipment migrations, and preparing various compliance reports. Previously from 2013 to 2015 as a TCF Biomedical Engineer at the VA Loma Linda Healthcare System, she helped implement a real-time location system and updated medical equipment inventories.
"Enabling Individual Wellness through Computational Systems Biology, Cloud An...Hyper Wellbeing
"Enabling Individual Wellness through Computational Systems Biology, Cloud Analytics, Wearables, Machine Learning and More" - Riaan Conradie (Co-Founder, LifeQ)
Delivered at the inaugural Hyper Wellbeing Summit, 14th November 2016, Mountain View, California.
For more information including details of subsequent events, please visit http://hyperwellbeing.com
The summit was created to foster a community around an emerging industry - Wellness as a Service (WaaS). Consumer technologies, in particular wearables and mobile, are powering a consumer revolution. A revolution to turn health and wellness into platform delivered services. A revolution enabling consumer data-driven disease risk reduction. A revolution extending health care past sick care towards consumer-led lifelong health, wellness and lifestyle optimization.
WaaS newsletter sign-up http://eepurl.com/b71fdr
@hyperwellbeing
HxRefactored 2015: Drew Schiller "Beyond the Bracelet"HxRefactored
Drew Schiller, Co-founder & CTO of Validic discusses changes in healthcare as a result of the wearable movement which enables patients to take a more active role in their own healthcare.
This document summarizes an e-health platform called uCarenet that provides several tools to help manage home and palliative care. It describes a mobile app called uCareRELIEF that allows patients to self-report symptoms from home and clinicians to monitor them remotely. A pilot study found high rates of patient engagement and self-reporting through uCareRELIEF reduced emergency visits. The document outlines other uCarenet tools like a home care management platform, translation app called uCareLINGO, and their goals to improve care coordination and access through digital technologies.
Let api change your relationship with your doctorSon Nguyen
This document discusses how APIs could improve healthcare management and change the relationship between patients and doctors. It notes that most healthcare spending goes to managing chronic conditions, which is costly when problems become serious crises. APIs could enable continuous remote health monitoring to detect issues early through wearable patches. This could prevent expensive hospital visits and improve outcomes. The document also describes how APIs allow different medical applications and staff to securely collaborate, like at UCSF where they replaced pagers. If APIs make the relationship with doctors easier and less costly, it could help better manage chronic conditions.
Digital Transformation—Spotlight on the Hospital: Jonathan Melnick, Lux Resea...Jill Gilbert
Digital transformation is coming to healthcare as major tech companies invest heavily in digital health. While disruption happens quickly in other industries, healthcare change will be slower due to its complexity. However, automotive examples show electronics will comprise over 50% of vehicle costs. This will open the supply chain and accelerate innovation. A digital hospital would be organized by data and analytics rather than medical specialties. Predictive analytics could link previously separate conditions. Behavior augmentation solutions would be common. Monitoring of things like fertility and seizures would be core capabilities. Data-driven healthcare will challenge providers' competencies and how expertise and data share profits.
User-generated health data from individuals and connected devices, partnerships between organizations to reform healthcare delivery models, and leveraging large amounts of data to drive decisions and discoveries are transforming healthcare. Consumer choice, behavioral incentives, and feedback loops enabled by social networks and mobile technologies encourage preventative health behaviors. Data-driven personalized care models, remote patient monitoring, and participatory research aim to lower costs and accelerate medical innovation.
Vator Splash Health, Wellness & Wearables 2017
A presentation on the Vator conference in San Francisco, CA. Perhaps one of my favorite conference series in health tech featuring many perspectives: tech, insurance, genomics, behavioral health, diagnostics, devices and more.
The Extreme Future of Health Care 2014James Canton
Radical trends in health care and medicine will change business and society. This presentation fresh from Dr. James Canton's New Keynote Presentation and from his upcoming new book looks at the trends in biotech, synthetic biology, digital health, genomics, wellness and regenerative medicine that will shape the near future of our world and health. Find out what's next and how to prepare today. For more info see http://globalfuturist.com
HXR 2017: Bakul Patel: How the FDA Is Promoting Innovation and Protecting the...HxRefactored
Health care entrepreneurs have described the FDA as a barrier to the market. Most of the time companies do not know when the FDA is regulating their app, device, or software. With new hands-off policies instituted to promote innovations to the market, Bakul will provide insights on the FDA's plans to regulating health technology as well as protecting the patients who are using the products.
The document discusses the progression of Health 2.0 from user-generated health care to partnerships reforming health care delivery to data driving decisions and discovery. It outlines the stages of Health 2.0 and how data from individuals, populations, and references is integrated through a data utility layer to power unplatforms and composite applications that inform decisions and actions.
- The document discusses the rise of participatory health and Health 2.0, where patients are more actively engaged in managing their own health through online tools and communities.
- Key aspects of Health 2.0 include personalized search/information, online communities for support/knowledge sharing, and new tools that unlock health data and enable transactions.
- Participatory health involves patients partnering with providers to reform healthcare delivery through continuous involvement in care, supported by online/mobile resources.
Health 2.0 refers to the application of Web 2.0 technologies and principles to healthcare, including personalized search tools, online health communities that share information, and new interfaces and analytics that unlock health data. The document outlines the current state of Health 2.0 with search, communities and tools, and predicts future directions such as better integration of these areas and new "unplatforms" that bring together applications and data across different services. The goal is more engaged patients and improved healthcare through leveraging collective knowledge and data.
Edwina Rogers, executive director of Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, began her presentation by highlighting the movement to advance medical homes.
With the U.S. being the number one in the world for the cost of healthcare and ranked number 37 in the quality category, something needs to change. Rogers discussed the broad stakeholder support and participation for the movement, as well as the incredible volunteer involvement. The four ‘centers’ include: the Center to Promote Public-Payer Implementation, the Center for Multi-Stakeholder Demonstration, the Center for eHealth Information Adoption and Exchange and the Center for Health Benefit Redesign and Implementation. Medical Homes will provide superb access to care, patient engagament in care, clinical information systems, care coordination, team care, patient feedback and publically available information.
Edwards explained that the Obama administration believes the medical homes concept is the best way to approach healthcare reform. The U.S. House of Representatives has showed great support for the movement and is helping develop and allocate funds for a five-year pilot program. She expressed her enthusiasm for the movement and her prediction that the medical home model is certainly the future of health care.
A complete version of Rogers’ presentation on the Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative is available online.
This document discusses how healthcare organizations can leverage Web 2.0 technologies like social media, blogs and online communities. It provides examples of how these tools are being used for self-care management by patients, consumer-driven healthcare research, physician networking and recruitment. While return on investment is difficult to calculate, these technologies can help drive traffic, enhance reputation and empower employees if implemented as part of an overall online strategy.
Matthew Holt analyzed several forecasts and scenarios related to health care spending and insurance coverage in the United States. His analysis showed that forecasts from 2010 underestimated the number of uninsured Americans and overestimated per capita health care spending. Reform after 2010 led to fewer uninsured Americans but health care spending as a share of GDP remained higher than predicted. Without reform, more Americans would be uninsured and health care costs would continue to rise rapidly.
This document discusses the opportunity for transformation in healthcare through a P4 (Predictive, Preventive, Personalized, and Participatory) approach. It notes that the current healthcare system spends most of its resources on treating preventable chronic diseases. It proposes using complex systems approaches and personalized medicine to shift focus toward prevention, wellness, and patient engagement. The document outlines pilot projects at Ohio State applying a P4 approach to wellness and care coordination for chronic conditions.
Medicine of the Future—The Transformation from Reactive to Proactive (P4) Med...Ryan Squire
Medicine of the Future—The Transformation from Reactive to Proactive (P4) Medicine as presented at the Ohio State University Medical Center Personalized Health Care National Conference.
Leroy Hood, MD, PhD, is the president and founder of the Institute of Systems Biology. Dr. Hood is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Engineering. His professional career began at Caltech where he and his colleagues pioneered four instruments — the DNA gene sequencer and synthesizer and the protein synthesizer and sequencer — which comprise the technological foundation for contemporary molecular biology. In particular, the DNA sequencer played a crucial role in contributing to the successful mapping of the human genome during the 1990s.
http://www.systemsbiology.org/Scientists_and_Research
web2.0:Beyond Open Source in Health Caretobyo_init
The document discusses the emergence and applications of Web 2.0 technologies in healthcare. It describes how Web 2.0 utilizes open-source platforms like Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP to allow users to control their own data through services rather than packaged software. Examples of Web 2.0 applications that could benefit healthcare include blogs, wikis, social networking, tagging, and media sharing sites for clinicians, patients and consumers.
Dr. Leroy Hood lectured to a group of Ohio State University College of Medicine students and faculty on May 13, 2010 in advance of an announcement of a partnership between the Ohio State University Medical Center and the Institute for Systems Biology. The partnership will be known as
The document discusses four main topics related to healthcare: user-generated healthcare, consumers connecting to providers, partnerships to reform delivery, and using data to drive decisions and discovery. These topics are focused on wellness, prevention, exercise, food, making healthcare cheaper, and the evolution of research.
The 36th World Hospital Congress held a parallel session on November 11, 2009 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The session, led by Don Juzwishin Ph.D. MHSA and Reiner Banken M.D. M.Sc., focused on describing the importance of using scientific evidence in healthcare practice, policy, and decision making. Using high quality scientific evidence can help reduce costs and improve the quality of care provided to patients. The session also discussed how to develop evidence-based decision making through appropriate governance structures and linking evidence to decisions at different levels of a health system.
CORD Rare Drug Conference, June 8 - 9, 2022
Opportunities and Challenges for Data Management Real-World Data and Real-World Evidence
• Patient support programs: Sandra Anderson, Innomar Strategies
• AI for Data Management and Enhancement: Aaron Leibtag, Pentavere
• Patient Support and RWE: Laurie Lambert, CADTH
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning will have a profound effect in transforming healthcare and bridging the historical gap of information asymmetry between the healthcare ecosystem and people
The document discusses the transition from traditional medicine to smart health. Key points include:
- The shift from reactive, hospital-centric care to proactive, preventative, patient-centric care based at home.
- The move from fragmented, local data to interconnected electronic health records available anywhere.
- Empowering engaged, informed patients through participation and evidence-based decision support.
- Creating smart homes, communities and an ecosystem to support patient wellness, quality of life and care coordination.
Continuous Surveillance | Ahhm Healthcare Issue 47 - Asian Healthcare Magazinekevin brown
Skip… to what matters Latest issue is Out, its free and awaiting your grab Top five reasons for why professionals globally trust us.
Top five reasons for why professionals globally trust us
Strong editorial team who are market professionals themselves and understands what matters.
Thorough quality checks before the content is floated out for the people to read.
Top of the line advisory board members – stalwarts and pioneers in their fields.
Agility to always be abreast with the latest trends and happenings in the field of science and technology.
Available as per your convenience in Print and E-Book Format.
This video describes Intellimessage, a system for generating tailored medical messages to patients through the creation of individualized health profiles. The system matches patient data and preferences with clinical records to create personalized messages that improve health outcomes. It aims to reduce preventable hospital readmissions through evidence-based, tailored post-care messaging. The company was founded by a multidisciplinary team from the University of Kentucky, including a principal investigator, research assistants, an engineering student, and a successful entrepreneur.
A review of the health sensor market estimated at 400M devices and worth $4B by 2014, including 36 companies offering devices across the wellness, chronic, diagnostic and monitoring markets. Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/Khrd
As the author of “Big Data in Healthcare Hype and Hope,” Dr. Feldman has interviewed over 180 emerging tech and healthcare companies, always asking, “How can your new approach help patients?” Her research shows that data, as an enabling tool, has the power to give us critical new insights into not only what causes disease, but what comprises normal. Despite this promise, few patients have reaped the benefits of personalized medicine. A panel of leading big data innovators will discuss the evolving health data ecosystem and how big data is being leveraged for research, discovery, clinical trials, genomics, and cancer care. Case studies and real-life examples of what’s working, what’s not working, and how we can help speed up progress to get patients the right care at the right time will be explored and debated.
• Bonnie Feldman, DDS, MBA - Chief Growth Officer, @DrBonnie360
• Colin Hill - CEO, GNS Healthcare
• Jonathan Hirsch - Founder & President, Syapse
• Andrew Kasarskis, PhD - Co-Director, Icahn Institute for Genomics & Multiscale Biology; Associate Professor, Genetics & Genomic Studies, Icaahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai
• William King - CEO, Zephyr Health
New York eHealth Collaborative Digital Health Conference
November 18, 2014
The Digital Metamorphosis of the Pharma IndustryLen Starnes
The document discusses the digital transformation of the pharmaceutical industry. It notes changes like aging populations, rising healthcare costs, empowered patients, and new business models. Doctors are becoming "digital" and using social networks and mobile devices. Patients are forming online communities to share health data. The document suggests pharmaceutical companies must adapt by using digital tools, empowering sales forces with mobile technology, and building trust with doctors, patients, and online communities. Pharma must learn from the digital behaviors of doctors and patients to keep pace with their evolving expectations.
The Dietary Data Recording System supports the dietary assessment of participants by facilitating collection of more objective measurement of dietary intake in real time and with moderate cost
Digital technologies like wireless sensors, genomics, EHRs, mobile apps, and big data analytics can significantly help patients but cannot replace human compassion and advocacy. These technologies can improve patient engagement, access to information, and personalized care. However, the most effective patient advocates will still be human beings who can combine technology tools with qualities like empathy, communication skills, and devotion of time to help patients navigate the healthcare system.
Sage Bionetworks is launching a new platform called BRIDGE to enable open collaboration between patients, researchers, and funders. [1] BRIDGE will allow disease communities to define and contribute to research projects. [2] The goal is to involve citizen-patients more directly in research by allowing them to consent to participate, take surveys, share data, and participate in games and crowdsourcing challenges. [3] This could help shift biomedical research to be more open, collaborative, and relevant.
This document summarizes key trends in health and wellness according to a report by Ketchum. The top trend is that technology now dominates health decisions, with people researching health issues online before consulting doctors. People are increasingly managing their own health using various tools and technologies. Companies must curate credible health content and programs that engage people through the technologies they use for wellness. The future of health will involve meeting people's needs for information and support across various online and real-world settings.
The Future of Personalized Health Care: Predictive Analytics by @Rock_HealthRock Health
View the archived webinar here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJak41hIDWc
How can we use new and existing sources of data to deliver better, personalized care? Predictive analytics underlies what has always been conducted by doctors through their training, experience, and decision-making. Dozens of new digital products have hit the market and $1.9B has flowed into the space since 2011—but what does it take for an algorithm to accurately and reliably impact care?
Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/gzbzV
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
Patient Powered Research with Big Data and Connected Communities by Assoc. P...wkwsci-research
The document discusses how patients are playing an active role in maintaining their health through social media. It describes how patients use social media as a virtual community to exchange information and provide social support to each other. The document also discusses how big data can be used for knowledge discovery and drug safety monitoring to supplement traditional clinical practices and empower patients.
Presentation 'Use of social networks for innovation in health' done by Vicente Traver (SABIEN-ITACA previously TSB-ITACA) during the IBEC 2014 conference held in Gwangju from 20 to 22th November, 2014. Presentation is focused about how social media can be used as driver for innovation in health
Similar to Health 2.0 Spring Fling - Health20ville (20)
Matthew Holt Health 2.0 chapters keynote, Sept 2017Health 2.0
The document discusses how emerging technologies like social media, sensors, mobile devices, analytics and other digital innovations will transform healthcare from episodic care to continuous care. It notes that these changes will require moving beyond a "one size fits all" approach to better serving patients across the health continuum from healthy to acutely ill to chronically ill. Examples are given of new companies in areas like telehealth, wellness, prevention, data management, coaching, monitoring and new models of primary care.
The document discusses the evolution of Health 2.0, which focuses on participatory healthcare where patients can be partners in their own care. It describes how technologies are fusing as patients increasingly guide their own care, including the integration of social networks, search tools, content, and transaction data. Key aspects of Health 2.0 include user-generated health data, consumers connecting with providers, and partnerships to reform healthcare delivery through data-driven decisions and discovery.
Health Data Everywhere: Not a Drop to Link?Health 2.0
The document discusses a panel discussion on health data and its use. The panelists included representatives from Google, PatientsLikeMe, ACOR, and Health and Human Services. They discussed topics like user-generated health data, integrating data from different sources, and using technologies like Kinect to collect health data and assess movement disorders. The overall theme was around the growth of health data from various sources but challenges around linking it together.
Presentation by Dr Aaron McKethan, who's running the Beacon Communities project at ONC. This was the presentation he gave to the Health 2.0 Community in the webinar on July 21
Health 2.0 Europe - Keynote - The Danish National e-Health PortalHealth 2.0
The Danish National e-Health Portal Sundhed.dk provides citizens access to their personal health information and the ability to book appointments, renew prescriptions, and communicate with doctors. It also offers medical information, quality ratings of hospitals, and online support groups for patients. Usage has increased significantly since its launch in 2003. Clinical staff acceptance is high due to time savings from digital health records. Sundhed.dk has received international recognition and its continued funding indicates the owners view it as a success.
Health 2.0 Europe - Keynote - Council for Public Health and Health Care - The...Health 2.0
The document discusses how healthcare providers, insurers, governments, and patients should make greater use of social media and online communities to improve healthcare. It recommends that these groups provide information transparently online, involve patients in policy formulation, fund innovations with added value, optimize patient contact through social media, implement shared care between providers and consumers, and address the digital divide so more people can benefit from online health resources and self-management tools. The goal is to empower patients and put them at the steering wheel of their own healthcare.
Akamai is a leader in powering rich media, dynamic transactions, and enterprise applications online. They have over 3,100 customers and 1,400 employees, and generated $860 million in revenue in 2009. The document discusses how performance, size, security, and location all matter for internet applications. It outlines how Akamai uses their global network of over 60,000 servers across 3,000 locations to optimize content delivery and make the internet more reliable, high-performance, and secure for customers.
Diabeo is a mobile and web-based diabetes management system developed through a scientific collaboration. It allows patients to track glucose readings, carbohydrate intake, insulin doses, physical activity, and share the data with healthcare providers. Clinical studies show Diabeo improves glycemic control without increasing providers' time and patients want to continue using the system.
The Path to Clinical Groupware. by Vince KuraitisHealth 2.0
Presentation by Vince Kuraitis (Better Health Technologies) about Hitech & the path toe Clinical Groupware. Given at Health 2.0 in the Doctor's Office, in Jacksonville, FL, Apr 24, 2010
What does ARRA, HITECH and Meaningful Use mean to youHealth 2.0
The document discusses the concepts of ARRA, HITECH, and Meaningful Use as they relate to adopting and using electronic health records (EHRs) in a meaningful manner. It provides an overview of the regulatory definitions and goals of Meaningful Use, as well as the three main regulations from CMS and ONC that specify requirements and standards. It also summarizes key aspects of the proposed EHR incentive programs for eligible professionals and hospitals, including eligibility, payment amounts and timelines, reporting requirements, and clinical quality measures.
Tales from the Trenches: Implementing an EMRHealth 2.0
The document outlines an agenda for a presentation on the evolution of computers from 4000 BC to 2010. It discusses the early history of computing devices like the abacus and the Harvard Mark I computer. It then covers the current state of the healthcare IT market and challenges like data fragmentation across different systems. The rest of the presentation focuses on strategies for successful implementation of electronic medical records systems, including selecting the right vendor, training staff, and addressing common reasons for IT project failure like lack of planning and physician buy-in.
2. User-generated Consumers connect Partnerships to Data drives decisions
health care to providers reform delivery & discovery
3. User-generated Consumers connect Partnerships to Data drives decisions
health care to providers reform delivery & discovery
4. WELLNESS 2.0, PREVENTION, MAKING HEALTH THE EVOLUTION
EXERCISE & FOOD CARE CHEAPER OF RESEARCH
User-generated Consumers connect Partnerships to Data drives decisions
health care to providers reform delivery & discovery
5. WELLNESS 2.0, PREVENTION, MAKING HEALTH THE EVOLUTION
EXERCISE & FOOD CARE CHEAPER OF RESEARCH
User-generated Consumers connect Partnerships to Data drives decisions
health care to providers reform delivery & discovery
6. WELLNESS 2.0, PREVENTION, MAKING HEALTH THE EVOLUTION
EXERCISE & FOOD CARE CHEAPER OF RESEARCH
User-generated Consumers connect Partnerships to Data drives decisions
health care to providers reform delivery & discovery
19. The Costliest 20%
ACCOUNTABLE CARE
Personalized care models
CARE EXTENDERS & COACHING
INTELLIGENT TRIAGE
MAKING HEALTH CARE CHEAPER
Care Protocol Development
PAY FOR OUTCOMES
Medical Homes
PARTICIPATORY CARE
faster, cheaper
26. Open data
Real time data capture
DATA MINING
quantified self
The new peer review
KNOWLEDGE LIFE CYCLES
Data streams
From human subject to data owner
CITIZEN SCIENCE
self-tracking
self-organizing trials
THE EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH
Crowdsourced information
MASH UPS
Real time
Anecdotal data
Hypothesis or evidence
Participant-driven research
UNSTRUCTURED DATA
Narrative as data
DEEP SEARCH