by Susannah Fox | Dec 3, 2012
Warning: this doesn’t end well. Not for anyone in the story. Unless it changes you, as it did me. Jonathan Welch, MD, teaches at Harvard Medical School and practices in the ER at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. But, as is often the case in life, the...
by e-Patient Dave | Nov 1, 2012
Next in our series of posts by SPM members on their experience at last weekend’s PCORI workshop. See Monday’s introductory post. I recently met (face to face) Danny van Leeuwen, one of the newer members of our society. He’s a sensitive, caring...
by e-Patient Dave | Oct 31, 2012
Second in a series announced yesterday of posts by SPM members who attended last weekend’s PCORI workshop. This one’s from Kathy Day, an avid e-patient advocate from Maine. This originally appeared here on her blog, on Monday. Why PCORI made me endure...
by e-Patient Dave | Oct 30, 2012
As noted in today’s earlier post, we’re starting a series of posts by SPM members who participated in last weekend’s PCORI workshop. Kelly Young (@RAWarrior) is one of the smartest e-patients I’ve ever seen anywhere. Aside from her technical...
by e-Patient Dave | Oct 30, 2012
All: I’d like to collect a list of all blog posts about this PCORI weekend, from SPM members (our Society) and anyone else. Please write to blog@participatorymedicine.org, and disregard the auto-reply that you’ll get. __________________ This post started...
by Kathleen O'Malley | Sep 18, 2012
Guest blogger Neel Shah, MD is the Executive Director of Costs of Care and a chief resident in obstetrics and gynecology based at Harvard Medical School. As a presidential election looms and the American economy struggles to recover, the spiraling costs of healthcare...
by e-Patient Dave | Aug 30, 2012
Yes, “Regina” – you know who I mean.:-) You know someone’s a star in the firmament when they gain first-name status. (Especially in healthcare, where “the other Regina” happens to be Surgeon General!) As we reported here in June,...
by Susannah Fox | Jul 15, 2012
Anyone who has doubts about including patients’ input in research studies should talk with Kathleen Bogart, PhD. She focuses on the social ramifications of facial paralysis, both congenital (like Moebius Syndrome) and acquired (like the often partial facial paralysis...
by Kathleen O'Malley | Jul 5, 2012
This guest post by Idelle Davidson originally appeared in the Huffington Post as “ASCO, Where Have You Been? The organization that sets standards for cancer care does not include cognitive issues in their patient consent document.” Last month, I was in Arlington, Va....
by Ileana Balcu | Jul 3, 2012
By Michael L. Millenson The empowered patient, skeptical of professional authority, is not a new phenomenon: he was actually created by the American Revolution. Reading through historian Gordon Wood’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book, The Radicalism of the American...
by Kathleen O'Malley | Jun 27, 2012
This post originally appeared at http://socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/2012/06/20/2012-patient-caregiver-scholarship-contest-for-social-media-summit/. The Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media is offering an opportunity for patient advocates to attend its Social Media...
by Ileana Balcu | Jun 22, 2012
Member Elisabeth Bailey published a few articles on the Dr Greene website. Her recent book, The Patient’s Checklist, got great reviews and is a great workbook for anyone having any medical procedure in a hospital. In the Dr Greene articles, Elisabeth is...
by e-Patient Dave | Jun 19, 2012
Susannah Fox’s post about this two years ago pretty much went over my head: I didn’t get how important it was. But at this month’s White House conference on patient-generated data, I met Nikolai Kirienko, who was the central specimen in her post. The...
by Ileana Balcu | May 18, 2012
Neil Versel, a HIT journalist, relates a very touching story of his father’s care at two different hospitals: one was uncoordinated and prone to errors and near misses, another one was quite a good experience. Unfortunately Neil’s father had a rare poorly...
by e-Patient Dave | Mar 21, 2012
Update 3/23: here’s the transcript of the event. Remember December’s post about the #firstMRI idea, to help poor unsuspecting patients prepare for the “monkeys banging on garbage cans” experience? It’s a project now! Join us for...
by e-Patient Dave | Mar 1, 2012
SPM member Regina Holliday is known for her “Walking Gallery” of painted jackets, each telling one person’s healthcare story, which she relates in an accompanying post on her blog. On Tuesday she became the latest e-patient to testify at a meeting of...
by Kathleen O'Malley | Feb 28, 2012
The Journal of Participatory Medicine has published a narrative by Kelly Young entitled “Present, Patient, and Accounted for: How and Why Patients Are Present at Scientific Meetings of the American College of Rheumatology.” Young describes how the...
by e-Patient Dave | Feb 12, 2012
It’s funny how things turn out sometimes. Lately I’ve written a lot here about e-patients taking an active role at a new level in healthcare, not just engaging in their care, but actually defining what it should be. Well, wouldn’t you know it, life...
by Kathleen O'Malley | Feb 8, 2012
Guest blogger Helen Palmquist is a member of the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance support community, hosted by Inspire. She lives in suburban Chicago. I was diagnosed with ovarian cancer at age 41, in the pre-Web days of 1987. From my hospital bed after my first...
by e-Patient Dave | Jan 10, 2012
Edited a few minutes after the original post. Over on the Harvard Business Review blog a post yesterday is stirring up discussion. I hope well-informed SPM members can help shed some light in the comments there, citing as many specifics as you can. (As I compiled the...
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