Archive for 2009

The Future of Web 2.0

June 26, 2009

A post by Tim O’Reilly and John Battelle from the Web 2.0 Summit predicts extension of many of the existing tools to a more pervasive and organized internet and social media. “Web Squared: Web 2.0 Five Years On” describes the future of:

  • search using speech recognition
  • data subsystems
  • making structured data out of unstructured data
  • Sensor-based applications, such as, voice recognition on mobile devices
  • Photosynth, Gigapixel Photography, and Infinite Images ( synthesize 3D images from crowdsourced photographs)
  • The Rise of Real Time: A Collective Mind – we are moving toward having everything in real time, not just music, videos and books
  • sensor-driven purchasing

However, change is moving so quickly, how many of these predictions will be reality in the next six months. Perhaps what will take 5 years is the integration of the platform, the apps and devices to become pervasive.

And how will all this filter into healthcare. iPhone apps for health care are just beginning to develop. I’m sure that more are on the way. What we need is a follow up article on the vision for Health 2.0 five years on.

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Peter Neupert on Healthcare Reform

June 10, 2009

Peter Neupert of Microsoft writes an article for the the Washington Post titled “Diagnosing and Treating the Health Non-System. ”
He discusses three “diseases”:

  • Access (too many uninsured people)
  • Value (too much spending for the health results delivered)
  • Ignorance (at every level – who really pays for health, misaligned incentives, true costs, quality measures, transparency and more)

He focuses on value and notes that innovation is not occurring in health care “because of the inflexibility in the payment system and misaligned incentive.”  Particularly, innovation regarding the management of chronic disease which accounts for 70%  of medical cost.

There will certainly be alot of discussion on realigning incentives to pay for outcomes rather than volume in the upcoming healthcare reform debates. It is long overdue.

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What is Web 3.0?

May 27, 2009

There has been alot of debate about what Web 3.0 is and when it will arrive. In a post on ReadWriteWeb titled,  Web 3.0 or Not, There is Something Different About 2009, the debate continues. Also see the embedded slideshare. Some important trends in 2009 are:

  • Open data
  • Structured data -> smarter
  • Filtering content
  • Real-time
  • Personalization
  • Mobile (location-based, so you could say that’s smarter use of data too)
  • Internet of Things (the Web in real-world objects).

Linked data and Google snippets are noted as part of the trend. It sounds like mashups, web services and physical world integration are leading to a defacto Web 2.0 world. The implications for Health 2.0 will be the topic of a future post.

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Update on Physician Social Networking

May 22, 2009

Participated in the Within3.com advisory board this evening – a very dynamic meeting with lots of creating ideas from the board and the staff. Their business model is refreshing – no advertising, no anonymous identities, developing communities which enhance healthcare and the practice of medicine. They just launched the community for the alumni of Boston’s Childrens Hospital. Within3.com is a Cleveland startup (yes, Cleveland does have startups including many biotech firms). This is a company to watch.

Also, videos from the Health 2.0 conference in Boston have been posted.

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Linked Data in Health Care

May 15, 2009

In a recent TED video, Tim Berners Lee presented on linked data including in health care and social networks. Te WC3 document he authored on this is here. This is forward thinking and although he did not mention Web 3.0, the implication is that this is the next big thing. Other links about linked data:

In a related story, IBM recently released its Exploratory Stream Processing Systems which “enables efficient extraction of knowledge and information from potentially
enormous volumes and varieties of continuous data streams.”

Here is the linked data video:

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Health 2.0 Updates

May 4, 2009

Two recent postings shining more light on Health 2.0. Specifically, a European post on Health 2.0 and Information Therapy, the joint topics for the Boston conference. He notes that both are an “enhance the patient care and the patient provider relationship.”  He wonders about the business case for using something like Mayo Clinic’s Health Manager based on HealthVault.  Currently, there is no indication that there are any such plans but some of the other examples, such as, LiveStrong and ChangeHealthcare, may have a business case for healthcare organizations.
Second is a video of Clay Shirky, author of Here Comes Everybody which I am currently reading. I also heard hims speak at HIMSS 2009. The video on Ask Manny Hernedez’s blog gives an update on the book. The complexities of networks and the tools which enable groups to form without hierarchies has interesting implications for healthcare. Healthcare, especially hospitals and nursing with their sometimes rigid structure inherited from the military and academia, is often the antithesis of social media. How will these tools change healthcare? Will healthcare hierarchies disappear? Probably not soon, but these structures will be challenged by social media in the short term.

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The Digital Consumer: Roadmap to Web 2.0 in Healthcare Organizations

April 29, 2009

From a recent presentation in Baltimore.
The Digital Consumer: Web 2.0 Roadmap for Healthcare Organizations
View more presentations from John Sharp.

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Health 2.0 aftermath – An Avalanche of Creative Activity

April 28, 2009

Several articles and blog posts after the Health 2.0 conference and Healthcamp immediately prior in Boston reflect the incubator of innovation which is this space.

  • The public’s belief in scientific uncertainty and the importance of the social health Internet” describing a “health knowledge-dialectic” between providers and consumers
  • Stanley Feld on “Healthcare Is A Team Sport” which is complimentary of Jen McCabe Gorman’s understanding of social networking and content and his belief “that repair of the healthcare system can be partially achieved with effective
    disease specific social networks as an extension of physicians’ care.”
  • This Twitter Thing from Info.Matics about the experience of twittering at a conference as a confirmatory experience.
  • Finally, the response of Google to ePatientDave’s experience with Google Health.

With the related activity on Twitter continuing, more thoughts on the role of Health 2.0 in health care reform will emerge.

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Mayo Clinic Launches Health Manager using HealthVault

April 22, 2009

Mayo Clinic has announced its new Personal Health Record called Health Manager. Besides a feature rich tool including managing personal health information, monitoring health using a dashboard feature and getting health advice (integration with their health content), there are some significant aspects of this announcement:

  • partnership with Microsoft HealthVault - right behind New York Presbyterian. The first two large medical centers to announce their Microsoft partnership
  • this occurred right  after the announcement of stricter HIPAA rules under the HITECH federal regulations
  • It is offered to the general public and not just patients of Mayo Clinic. MyNYP approaches this in the same way. It focuses it health information on heart health with an intro by Mehmet Oz of the You books fame.

The strategy appears to be to offer a service and potential attract new patients. The extent of the integration strategy with Microsoft HealthVault is unclear – can one create an account at one of these sites but then login directly through HealthVault? These two new sites will be interesting to watch.

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Informatics as the glue between the I.T. enterprise and the clinical leadership

April 12, 2009

In an article from the NY Times today, medical informatics is described as “Connecting the Dots of Medicine and Data.” The article points out some example of roles filled by medical informatics and also the lack of standards for educational programs in medical informatics many of which are masters degrees or certificate programs. At the same time, the chief executive of AMIA cites the need for 70,000 health informaticians as the government provides incentives for electronic medical records. This quote summarizes the profession well:

“IT takes more than technical skills and an understanding of health care to succeed as a health informatician. Diplomacy skills are crucial in connecting two potentially contentious groups: doctors and programmers.”

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