Temporary note:
I’ve been asked to withdraw this post for now – it linked to videos of other speakers as well as me, not all of whom have given their permission yet.
Back soon, I hope.
Power to the Patient!
By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment
Temporary note:
I’ve been asked to withdraw this post for now – it linked to videos of other speakers as well as me, not all of whom have given their permission yet.
Back soon, I hope.
I was thrilled to be engaged by clinician network QuantiaMD to do an “Ask the Patient” feature. (I get a small stipend.) It’s live, and available for public viewing. Free registration is required to view their videos; you can preview the first minute or so of each one without registering.
We often talk (here and on e-patients.net) about patient social networks and how they help spread ideas and information. Well I’ll be darned, it turns out doctors and nurses are doin’ it too, with similar benefits. Who knew? :-) And you know I was thrilled that they’ve added a new feature, “Ask the Patient.” Here’s hoping every clinician community does the same. Let Patients Help!
It works like this:
By e-Patient Dave Leave a Comment
New York City – Friday, January 27.
Hosted by Edelman – the leading independent global PR firm
As I said Thursday, I spent the week at University Medical Center Nijmegen, an hour’s drive southeast of Amsterdam, where Lucien Engelen heads up a program called REshape – reshaping healthcare with patients truly at the center. I mean, at the center – not just the topic of discussion.
On Wednesday we held the first e-Patient Boot Camp, the six hour intensive, in-depth compilation of topics. That was a thrill – to see an action-oriented academic medical center seriously sinking its teeth into what this all means and what they can do with it, starting this week. And the night before we had a terrific prolog: an “e-Patient Workshop,” conceived and organized by REshape’s Stan Janssen. Here’s what it looked like:
(Stan is standing next to the screen.)
We started with lecture – the basics of e-patient-ness. But this time it was different, because the audience was six groups of patients with a common disease, each with one or more physicians who treat that disease, at that hospital. It was the first event I’ve seen where a hospital got to work on making participatory medicine a reality: patients networking, working closely with physicians, who welcome them as partners.
Updated October 10: Added transcript of the video, at bottom.
On Tuesday morning, my Dutch colleague Lucien Engelen (Twitter @LucienEngelen) took me to the production studio in the attic of his little office and we shot this interview. I had no idea what questions he’d ask, and this was my day for jetlag confusion after a Saturday night redeye from the US. He edited it down, and boom, instant TV show! I’ll explain the context in a moment, but first, the interview (13:37):
Here’s a companion article (in Dutch) in Thursday’s “Skipr” (Dutch health newspaper) about REshape, including this video and an audio interview (also in Dutch) with Lucien.
The setting: Radboud REshape Center
I’m having so much fun with this TED video (see earlier post) that I hardly know what to say. The best thing is that the simple message “Let Patients Help!” is spreading around the world – it’s got over 180,000 views so far, and volunteers have added subtitles in nine languages – most recently Persian (Farsi) and Korean. People are passing it from friend to friend to friend – clearly, this has tapped into a universal desire: let patients help heal healthcare.
Yesterday the TED people even gave it a vanity URL: http://on.TED.com/Dave. How fun is that??
The next big thing is a live “TED conversation” Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. EDT (10 a.m. Pacific, 7:00 p.m. in Central Europe, etc). The topic ties into one of the key statements in the video: “Patients are the most under-utilized resource” in healthcare. The question:
Why is the patient
the most under-used resource in healthcare??
How did that happen??
To participate, some preparation is required; instructions below:
About the event
Preparation
The event itself
__________
It happened at TEDx Maastricht, a distinctive, terrific event last April 4, in the south Netherlands city of Maastricht. (Here’s a Blogger Grand Rounds post with many videos from the event.) Perhaps most significant, the first speaker announced for that event wasn’t a big name celebrity, it was a patient. Just a patient. And that’s what the event was about: putting the patient at the center of the whole health conversation.
Next year’s event is already scheduled – April 2, 2012. I’ll be in the audience if at all possible, because there were some sharp talks, and event production was excellent.
TEDx Maastricht is produced by Lucien Engelen, “health 2.0 ambassador, speaker, author and Director of the Radboud REshape & Innovation Centre at UMC St Radboud in Nijmegen.” Reshape? Yes – as in, taking healthcare apart and putting it back together, better.