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Hacking Health in Hamilton Ontario - Let's hear that pitch!

What compelled me to register for a weekend Health Hackathon? Anyway, I could soon be up to my ears in it. A pubmed search on Health Hack...

Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2022

What is health journalism?

According to wikipedia that there are not many courses or career paths specifically on medical journalism, but it is hard to imagine that this field is not going to expand in future.

Recently the McMaster Daily News  reported on a YouTube channel called ViolinMD created by Dr. Siobhan Deshauer. She was a fifth year medical resident (recently finished residency successfully) but has been vlogging about her experience quite frequently since she started residency. She was a graduate of the Michael G. DeGroote school of medicine, which is why you can get a BA in music (violin) and still get into a medical school like McMaster. In one of the episodes she mentions "medical journalism" as she did a stint doing such for ABC news as a consultant on their medical news team. I can't recall that specific episode  - because I have watched so many of them -  but we can imagine that one of the reasons she got that consultancy work was because of her creative media skills vlogging her real lived experience on the front lines.

In Canada one of the most famous medical journalists might be Andre Picard, health columnist for the Globe and Mail. His recent book "Neglected No More:The Urgent Need to Improve the Lives of Canada's Elders in the Wake of a Pandemic", shed a lot of light on the state of long term care in the Canadian system.

There is a health column in the New York times called "Diagnosis" written by Lisa Sanders MD, who used write scripts for the TV Series House. I watched the TV documentary version of it about solving rare medical mysteries, like it is detective work.  Of course there are the likes of Sanjay Gupta, Chief Medical Correspondent for CNN, etc.

There are also investigative journalism books that really delve into medical issues. Michael Pollan wrote "How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence" which is a master study of psychedelics research. The book by author  James Nestor called "Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art" is a pioneering investigation into the new research and evidence on human breathing and the effect on our overall health. It is fascinating to see how these science minded though "non-health practitioners" explore these fields so relevant to medical well being.  There are many more books by journalists that explore medical and health issues. 

An area tangential to all this are the scientists who study the reporting of health information in various media looking for evidence of factual inaccuracy, let alone stories that create false hope or deceive the public. Timothy Caulfield is famous for debunking the myths and misconceptions, and the McMaster Health Forum has an evidence based health research group focusing on policy decision making for various health topics of concern.

Thursday, March 26, 2020

digital health initiatives in the wake of COVID-19


6. 17-year-old builds a website to closely track the Coronavirus epidemic and now millions are using it:https://www.democracynow.org/2020/3/13/meet_the_17_year_old_behind

7. Flatten the Curve. Volunteer engineers and clinicians big data real-time heatmap of potential and confirmed COVID-19 cases: https://flatten.ca/

8. Ontario, Alberta, etc., billing codes for primary virtual visits: https://ontariomd.news/

9. Wildly Popular South Korean covid-19 tracker app: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/wildly-popular-coronavirus-tracker-app-helps-south-koreans-steer-clear-of-outbreak-areas-2020-03-18

10. South Korean coronavirus tracking apps: https://www.businessinsider.com/coronavirus-south-korea-photos-apps-location-outbreak-where-2020-3#the-app-collects-data-from-public-government-info-including-the-korea-centers-for-disease-control-to-show-the-date-a-patient-was-diagnosed-with-covid-19-along-with-the-persons-nationality-age-gender-and-where-they-visited-2

11. WeDoctor - free consultation from medical clinicians: https://promo.guahao.com/en/global/pneumonia

12. Donate PPE in Canada: https://togetherwecandothis.ca/

13. National Emergency Library - Free books online: http://www.openculture.com/2020/03/the-national-emergency-library-makes-nearly-1-5-million-books-free-to-read-right-now.html

14. MIT Emergency Ventilator Project: https://e-vent.mit.edu/

15. Canadian MD Ventilator Hack 1 ventilator for 9 people: https://www.upworthy.com/canadian-doctors-brilliant-evil-genius-hack-turns-one-ventilator-into-nine

16. Nobel Laureate Leads Push for Made in Canada Ventilator: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-nobel-laureate-leads-push-for-simple-made-in-canada-ventilator/

17. Medical Futurist - COVID-19 Was Needed for Telemedicine to Finally Go Mainstream: https://medicalfuturist.com/covid-19-was-needed-for-telemedicine-to-finally-go-mainstream/

18. Project Northern Lights - Groups of Canadians using Slack to hack projects for COVID:  https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-canadians-use-crowdsourcing-to-produce-medical-supplies-for-health/

19. SECDEV looking for Cybersecurity IT Professionals to volunteer to protect healthcare centres from disinformation, ransom ware attacks, etc:https://www.secdev.com/

20. FutureLoop - Pandemic Edition: https://futureloop.com/register/coronavirus/












32. How is my Flattening?  includes vaccination percentages for Ontario

33. Canada's Public Health Data Meltdown - MacLeans article by Justin Ling


35. ProMed - International Society for the Infectious Diseases









Thursday, August 17, 2017

Boost Your eHealth Knowledge. Advance Your Career. Early Bird Deadline for HI Bootcamp Booster Shot Course in 2 Weeks.





National Institutes of Health Informatics

It is eHealth Design & Architecture Week!

"Too many men slip out of the habit of studious reading, and yet that is essential"
— William Osler
Stay in the habit. Continue your learning With NIHI


HI Bootcamp Booster Shot Early Bird Deadline Only 2 Weeks Away
 
HI Bootcamp Booster Shot
September 19 & 26; October 3, 10, & 17, 2017 | 12:00-3:00 PM ET
15 - 20  CPE Hours


Canada’s iconic HI Bootcamp is back! Be the first to take the new HI Bootcamp Booster Shot. Learn from the best…Professor Dominic Covvey, one of Canada’s top HI experts, and Dr. Tom Rosenal, one of Canada’s foremost authorities in clinical Informatics. Learn the new essential competencies and capabilities for today’s informatics professionals:

- Analytics and Big Data. 
- The Internet of Things (IoT).
- Artificial intelligence.
- The Cloud. 
- Precision/Personalized Medicine. 
- Consumer Informatics.
- Devices, Sensors, Sensor Networks and data produced.
- Personal Attitudes and implications in our workforce. 
- Biomedical Engineering and Health Informatics.
- Complexity in health care and quantization of Health Informatics
- And many others.

 Registration & More Information

Best Practices in HIT Implementation
Although health technology implementations have come a long way in the last decade, the risk of partial success and having a 'zombie' project is still high. Given the extensive investments made in health technologies and the high hopes for their effectiveness for health provider productivity and patient safety, best practices in health technology implementation are still topical. Learn about best practices in HIT implementation from a systematic review of the literature with high quality statistical analysis of the findings. The published paper has received over 4000 reads on ResearchGate, a social media site for researchers. Come learn what everyone is so excited about.
Canada's Chronic Disease Surveillance Network: Architecture & Next Steps
Canada's chronic disease surveillance network (www.cpcssn.ca) recently reached 1000 physicians and 1 million de-identified patients in its database. CPCSSN is revolutionizing primary care by making research easier and faster and by making it easier to apply quality improvement to patient populations. How did we get here? What makes CPCSSN sustainable? What are the impacts of primary care research? Where do we need to go next?
Creating the Next Generation mHealth App: A reference Architecture
mHealth apps in smartphone app stores are languishing; downloaded and abandoned because they don't solve people's problems. What is the ideal design for an mhealth app? What's working? What's not working? Why? This presentation addresses these questions and proposes a new paradigm for patient mhealth apps that could potentially solve the log-jam.
Learning from Amazon: Building the Next Generation EMR Form
What if electronic medical record (EMR) systems were designed like the World Wide Web? What if we could improve user experience rapidly because we could see how users were using the software? What if we could make actionable information available at the point of care instantly using Big Data techniques? What if we could quickly test whether new ideas will work and make them available into all EMRs immediately?
Lowering Costs in Health Care: Architecting Health Care for Diabetes Prevention
What if we could predict who would get diabetes, long before they actually got it? What if we could provide high risk patients with training, support and counselling to prevent diabetes? What if we provided diabetes prevention services to elderly patients who already have other diseases?
What Diabetes Prevention Apps Should Have and Why
mHealth apps are not being used. Over 45,000 mhealth apps are languishing in mobile app stores. We evaluated over 200 diabetes mobile apps found in the Apple and Google app stores against a Reference Architecture for high quality mobile apps. Surprisingly, we identified a niche where apps do work well and are popular with patients in this space. However, the vast majority of patients with diabetes are not served by these niche apps.

Email Philip Grove at pgrove@nihi.ca for assistance

National Institutes of Health Informatics
Website:
www.nihi.ca
Contact Us: info@nihi.ca

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Hacking Health in Hamilton Ontario - Let's hear that pitch!

What compelled me to register for a weekend Health Hackathon? Anyway, I could soon be up to my ears in it.

A pubmed search on Health Hackathons...https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28250965 came up with a research article that shows that Hacking Health does have very useful benefits. I am intrigue and would even like to do my own research on this.

I attended a pitch workshop and learned that intellectual property on ideas is not what it appears to be. From that perspective, and in the interests of ehealth promotion:

1. Medical School ePortfolio - So you want be a Doctor eh? [app, educational]
Problem:
Getting into medical school is like a lottery. Or is it? How can students best prepare so they don't become disappointed or feel like they are gambling getting in, or getting in and realizing it is not their ideal career choice?

Solution:
This app will be for students who want to be physicians. Maybe it could even be aimed at three levels; elementary, high school, and university. It would allow students to track their interest in a career in medicine from early days. Students are also getting into medical school after high school these days at Queens University. It could have tests and quizzes, links to schools, CV prep, volunteer opportunity suggestions, how to apply, what's involved in the actual application process at very schools. The book "So you want to be Doctor eh?" by Anne Berdl is an excellent resource to model this on. Also, many universities have learning portfolios and that is also a model. Possible mentor relationships or chats or talks with professionals in the field. By tests and quizzes, it could also have an educational role to survey student empathy, compassion training, aptitude, in addition to preparation for MCAT and other formal tests.

2.Smart Forms Builder for Healthcare [ app, software]
Problem:
Hospitals were faced with a crisis in screening patients and visitors for SARS at Ontario hospitals in 2003. The paper system they had was bogging down entry to the hospital. A LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) online screening system was eventually created to streamline the process. Healthcare administrators and even IT need to develop online forms quickly without programming skills as well as have access to useful data.

Solution:
There are smartform software systems like Google docs and commercial ones like Jotform, but they are not private and secure for personal health information. As well, smart forms need to be smart enough so people without programming experience can quickly develop an application. These kind of systems are evolving, but they just need something more akin to artificial intelligence to make them really smart and inexpensive to setup. API, mobile and REST applications would also be good integration components.

3. eHealth enabled browser [ browser, app, big data]
Problem:
Personal Health Records come in many different types, tethered, stand alone, and integrated. The  people who benefit most are those who need to monitor and access a lot of medical records and visits. However, tracking health, IOT, and fitness device data can be integrated into Personal Health Records to create an overall digital health snapshot. Not everyone likes to login to a portal and track their health data.

Solution:
The idea here is to integrate Watson IBM analytics, or google alpha Go search engine analytics built into a dedicated open source browser built on chrome (or chromium). While this might sound just like an app running on a smartphone, the idea is to build a Firefox, Chrome or Safari browser that is actually a dedicated health analytics and digital health single sign on personal health record browser. What you search and read in every day life is all fodder for personal health anlaytics. This is digital "google flu" writ larger for an individual. In a way, think of it is a browser add on or extension that is a personal health record data collector, storage, and dashboard, but it is actually the browser itself.

4. Universal Healthcare Observatory [Big Data app]
Problem:

The problem is that not everyone has access to free healthcare. Statistically, millions of people are rising out of poverty every year, according to the late Global Health researcher Hans Rosling. Access to free or affordable healthcare should be a basic human right.

Solution:
The purpose of the project is based on the scientific based belief of evidence based medicine that "for profit healthcare is hazardous to your health". The United Nations and even the WHO have many observatories, and this one would be similar to the European Observatory of Health Systems and Policies. It will be a big data app that pulls data and statistics from disparate sources to monitor the global healthcare systems in the world and promote any trends towards universal healthcare. It might be able to use the Trendalyzer software. The bold target would be to achieve universal access to free or affordable healthcare for everyone on the planet by 2050.

5. eHealth Garage [ infrastructure, service]
Problem:
In my neighbourhood there are two former automobile/gas stations that are now a Vietnamese restaurant and a Holistic Health Clinic. Gas stations used be found on almost every block in every neighbourhood in every city and town. Cars no longer break down because the technology is better and gas monopolies are pushing gas stations out of neighbourhoods. Needless to say, electric cars are moving in soon. Also in my neighbourhood is a legal Medical Marijuana Clinic. Why not an eHealth Garage?

Solution:
With an aging population living longer and a coming generations that might may well live easily way over 100 years of age because of advances in exponential medicine, preventive medicine and holistic health services need to be accessible with digital health services in the community. This is also a way to deconstruct medicine.The eHealth Garage could be a component of a Family Health Team but they might call it an eHealth clinic. I see the Garage being full of healthcare technology: x-ray machines, ultrasound, MRI, fitbits, resistance training gym machines, Transcranial Magnetic Stimluation (TMS) - almost any health technology that can be coupled with a digital health technology or record. DIY healthcare, though with options for professional healthcare oversight.



Thursday, October 2, 2014

National Institutes of Health Informatics - Education Series Fall 2014

National Institutes of Health Informatics

Announcing eSafety Series: Ensuring the Safety of our eHealth Systems and Programs
eSafety Series
Ensuring the Safety of our eHealth Systems and Programs

November 19 & 26, 2014
Live, Interactive, Online Sessions - 12:00 -1:30 PM ET
A Joint COACH and NIHI Program
Click Here for More Information

Special Rates for COACH Members and NIHI Colleagues
Patient safety has become a major concern in health care. Key Institute of Medicine and Canadian reports starting as early as 1999, underscore the importance of being safety conscious and proactive in identifying safety risks in healthcare. Today’s eHealth systems are increasingly important in enabling improvements in patient safety, but they can also inadvertently introduce new risks into the healthcare environment.

This online program introduces the COACH eSafety Guidelines: a comprehensive resource for health information professionals and others with a responsibility to ensure that eHealth systems are built and operated in a manner that reduces the risk to patient safety. The Guidelines provide a sound basis for implementing an eSafety Management Program including the assessment of risks using the eHealth Safety Case.
Session 1: Introduction to eSafety & the eSafety Management Program - November 19, 2014
This session will provide a foundation for understanding the issues and opportunities for addressing safety issues in eHealth systems and cover the main steps in setting up an eSafety management program .

Session 2: The eSafety Case - November 26, 2014
This session will introduce the eHealth safety case. The safety case is the safety equivalent of the privacy impact assessment and threat and risk assessment.

Register for eSafety and get 25% off of the coilbound edition COACH eSafety Guidelines. Email Cheryl, ccornelio @ coachorg.com to arrange this discount.  Available only to eSafety session registrants until November 18.
COACH
Canada's Health Informatics Association
NIHI
National Institutes of Health Informatics

Fall 2014 eHealth Education Line-Up
eHealth Future Trends
October 23, 30 & November 6, 2014
Usability Testing Essentials
November 13, 2014

 

National Institutes of Health Informatics
Website:
www.nihi.ca
Contact Us: info@nihi.ca; 1-800-860-7901

Unsubscribe

Sunday, March 3, 2013

HeLa High School will Teach Health Informatics

HeLa High School, opening in the Fall 2013 in Vancouver, Washington State USA is astonishing in a number of different ways:

  • It has Health Informatics as major concentration in the curriculum
  • It makes the term "pre-med" even more pre-med
  • It honours naming the school after Henrietta Lacks, stem cell medical research participant  who's cancerous tumours became the HeLa stem cell line
  • It follows maybe the Swiss education model which is based more on apprenticeship and job training models?
I've read the book by Rebecca Skloot about the life of Henrietta Lacks, and it is highly recommended. Quite appropriate for ethical reasons to name a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) school for her. Well they named it for the stem cells too. I know some Canadian university Health Science undergrad programs have a reputation being thought of as "pre-med", but this is even more competitive. How are students chosen for admission? If students are studying Health Informatics that early, what will that do the applied M.Sc. in Health Informatics in the future? 

New Vancouver high school will focus on health, bioscience

Evergreen Public Schools' HeLa High will open in fall

The view from a west-facing window inside the media center of the new Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School, which opens in the fall.
The view from a west-facing window inside the media center of the new Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School, which opens in the fall.


photo
Evergreen Public Schools Director of Facilities Susan Steinbrenner, left, and Public Information Specialist Kathryn Garcia-Stackpole tour the new Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School, the only such school in the state.
photo
Henrietta Lacks' cancerous cells were harvested without her knowledge and cultured for medical research to create an immortal cell line. Her story was told in the nonfiction book "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Portland author Rebecca Skloot. HeLa High is the first school building in the nation to be named for her.
photo
Evergreen Public Schools spokeswoman Carol Fenstermacher stands inside the school's simulated hospital nursing station, where students will get hands-on, real-world experience on their way to pursuing careers in health care.
MAP
Map data ©2013 Google - Terms of Use

Map
Hybrid

HeLa High School

9105 N.E. Ninth St., Vancouver
• School opens: Fall 2013. •Total estimated construction cost:
$23.7 million.
• Maximum number of students: 500.
• Size: 60,000 square feet.
• Curriculum focus: A biosciences and health care curriculum that includes extensive partnerships with Peacehealth Southwest Medical Center and others to provide opportunities for hands-on learning.

Programs of study

• Nursing and patient services.
• Health informatics.
• Biotechnology.
• Biomedical engineering.
• Pharmacy.
The pharmacy is nearly ready. The state-of-the-art nursing station is down the hall. But this isn't a hospital. It's Vancouver's newest high school.
Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School — HeLa High for short — is such a rare model that a very small number of similar schools exist nationwide. When its doors open in September, students will experience hands-on learning with state-of-the-art technology and partnership opportunities with PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center, just a block away.
"The state has a number of schools focused on STEM — science, technology, engineering and math, " said Julie Tumelty, the school's principal. "But we haven't heard about another school in Washington that is specifically focused on health and bioscience."
As baby boomers age, studies point to an increasing need for well-trained health care workers. An Evergreen Public Schools study indicated about 20 percent of its ninth-graders planned to pursue a career in health care. It seemed an opportune time to pursue the specialty school. PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center has worked with the school district for almost a decade to help plan the school. The medical center benefits by helping funnel more local students into health care fields.

How HeLa is funded

In 2002, Evergreen Public Schools received a $200,000 federal Workforce Investment Act grant to investigate how to develop employees to meet the growing demand for the health care industry. That led to the decision to build a heath-focused high school.
The total estimated construction cost is $23.7 million. To help with construction, the district received a $17.4 million Qualified School Construction Bond, federal stimulus money that is part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The remaining money comes from a $1 million grant from the Washington State Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development (CTED), proceeds from the district's previous land sales and state matching money.
The fast-growing district qualified for matching money because it has more than 1,200 high school students taking classes in portables. Moving about 500 of the district's high school students to the new school will ease the overcrowding and prevent the district from having to build another large, comprehensive high school in the near future.

Small footprint

The school's footprint of 2.9 acres is miniscule compared with the district's comprehensive high schools with between 40 and 50 acres each, including large sports fields and much larger parking lots. The outdoor space at HeLa includes four basketball hoops but no sports fields. The parking lot is small. In a nod of cooperation to the neighborhood, the district agreed that all students would arrive at the school via school bus. That'll prevent traffic congestion.
The 60,000-square-foot building was designed by LSW Architects and constructed by Skanska USA. If needed, an additional 20,000 square feet may be added later. Its high-tech design is apparent both inside and out. Two levels of solar panels on the south side will help provide power. The floors on the first level are polished concrete, and in the student commons the floor is heated for comfort.
Students will learn real-world nursing skills in the four-bed nursing station, complete with a simulated, interactive robot patient called SimMan. A simulation pharmacy and well-equipped laboratories will provide more hands-on learning. The library, called the research lab, will be stocked with a combination of electronic books and traditional paper textbooks.

Not traditional

HeLa isn't a traditional high school. It won't have sports teams, so instead of a large gym, the school has a fitness room where students will learn lifelong fitness using resistance training, mats, Pilates and medicine balls. There won't be a marching band or pep band, but a scaled-down music program may offer orchestra or symphony.
The first school year, the student body will consist of about 125 freshmen and 125 sophomores. The next two years, 125 freshmen will be added each year, so that 500 students eventually will be enrolled there. Students interested in attending the school completed an application and are being chosen via a lottery system from the district's comprehensive high schools, with an equal number of students coming from each school.
Classes will be integrated to create an overall focus on health and biosciences, Tumelty said. As an example, she said in English class, students will use informational texts and literature that are science-based.
"The goal is for students to see the connections between the disciplines so that they get a better view of how the real world works," Tumelty said. "Teachers will be working on creating these connections in authentic ways for students."
Freshmen and sophomores will take anatomy and physiology along with chemistry and biology "to give them a really good base in science," said Elisabeth Harrington, the district's director of curriculum and instruction. Before they enter their junior year, students will have to choose one of five pathways: nursing and patient care; health informatics (data processing); biomedical engineering; pharmacy; or biotechnology.
"In the first two years, as they're doing A&P, there will be a heavy emphasis on medical terminology," Harrington said. "Once they've picked their pathway, as juniors they'll partner with PeaceHealth with job shadowing opportunities. Seniors will have internships at PeaceHealth."

Who was Henrietta Lacks?

The cancerous cells of Henrietta Lacks, a poor black woman from Virginia, were harvested in 1951 without her knowledge and cultured for medical research to create an immortal cell line. Her cells were used to develop the polio vaccine, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization and cloning, among other things. Although billions of her cells have been sold for research, her family can't afford health insurance. Her story was told in the nonfiction book "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Portland author Rebecca Skloot. This is the first school building in the nation named after her.