I was just looking through some of the ePosters from the eHealth 2012 conference in Vancouver. I am glad I didn't go because I was accepted for an ePoster and I don't think mine (on Personal Health Records) would look as good as some of these.
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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...
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Global eHealth & Environmental eHealth
I have read some of the work of Dr. Richard Scott from the University of Calgary on Information Communication Technology and Global Health. I have in my calendar to listen to a webinar that he will give today through COACH. I didn't know he was leading a program on Environmental eHealth - which is thinking outside the box literally. Had a look through the WHO Global eHealth Bulletin the other day.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Autism, Calories, & Marathons
Instead of scouring the world's headlines for ehealth stories for this blog, I have been silently reading 3 books.
1. It is funny how we hear about books. The first I heard about on an interview with James Fitzgerald on CBC radio. I thought it tragic that both his father and paternal grandfather, who were in the medical profession, had committed suicide. Then there was the intriguing story about how his grandfather's life was kept secret in a kind of family shame. It turns out the grandfather, Gerry Fitzgerald, was the founder of Connaught Labs at the University of Toronto, which developed the insulin of Banting and Best, (and a lot of other vaccines for mass public immunization) and was one of the visionary founders and promoters of Public Health in Canada.
What Disturbs our Blood: A Son's Quest to Redeem the Past", by James Fitzgerald.
2. Different ... Not Less: Inspiring Stories of Achievement and Successful Employment from Adults with Autism, Asperger's, and ADHD, edited by Temple Grandin, PhD. I saw the TV special about her and her special gifts working as a designer in the cattle industry. In my job in research ethics I have seen a lot of research on autism spectrum. The stories of the lives of persons living with the spectrum, or are "Aspies" makes me think how many people I might know or have known who have this condition but have learned how to adapt among all us "neurotypicals". Someone told me a lot of people leading developments in Silicon Valley are like this. One of the life stories speculates that even Steven Jobs, one of the founders of Apple Computer, might have had Asperger's syndrome.
3. The book about diet is probably the only one that I won't finish reading, as it is kind of dense, but it also one of the most interesting. Well written books that question the "conventional wisdom" and science itself are always welcome. I heard about this book in a conversation with a Psychology professor who had previously told me about another great book that questioned the conventional wisdom, and which I also read, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Super Athletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen, by Christopher McDougall .
1. It is funny how we hear about books. The first I heard about on an interview with James Fitzgerald on CBC radio. I thought it tragic that both his father and paternal grandfather, who were in the medical profession, had committed suicide. Then there was the intriguing story about how his grandfather's life was kept secret in a kind of family shame. It turns out the grandfather, Gerry Fitzgerald, was the founder of Connaught Labs at the University of Toronto, which developed the insulin of Banting and Best, (and a lot of other vaccines for mass public immunization) and was one of the visionary founders and promoters of Public Health in Canada.
What Disturbs our Blood: A Son's Quest to Redeem the Past", by James Fitzgerald.
2. Different ... Not Less: Inspiring Stories of Achievement and Successful Employment from Adults with Autism, Asperger's, and ADHD, edited by Temple Grandin, PhD. I saw the TV special about her and her special gifts working as a designer in the cattle industry. In my job in research ethics I have seen a lot of research on autism spectrum. The stories of the lives of persons living with the spectrum, or are "Aspies" makes me think how many people I might know or have known who have this condition but have learned how to adapt among all us "neurotypicals". Someone told me a lot of people leading developments in Silicon Valley are like this. One of the life stories speculates that even Steven Jobs, one of the founders of Apple Computer, might have had Asperger's syndrome.
3. The book about diet is probably the only one that I won't finish reading, as it is kind of dense, but it also one of the most interesting. Well written books that question the "conventional wisdom" and science itself are always welcome. I heard about this book in a conversation with a Psychology professor who had previously told me about another great book that questioned the conventional wisdom, and which I also read, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Super Athletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen, by Christopher McDougall .
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Healthcare Informatics top 100 rankings
No idea there was such a thing - but here are the top 100 Healthcare Informatics rankings:
http://www.healthcare-informatics.com/hci100/2012-healthcare-informatics-100-ranking
http://www.healthcare-informatics.com/hci100/2012-healthcare-informatics-100-ranking
Friday, June 1, 2012
iPatients and Diagnosis
Are physicians losing the art and science of the physical exam because of technology? Dr. Abraham Verghese in this TED talk refers to the "ipatient" - when the the electronic record is viewed as being of more importance than observation of the actual patient. The topic of the disappearing art of the physical exam also appears in an excellent book, "Every Patient Tells a Story" by Dr. Lisa Sanders. Dr. Sanders apparently used to consult on the TV program House, as well as writing a column on "Diagnosis" for the New York Times. There is a lesson here for health informatics. I used to think the "virtual patient" would be quite useful to run diagnostic simulations, self-tracking, etc., but this is different.
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
NHS to shut down Personal Health Record Service
The UKs National Health Service is going to shut down it's personal health recored service, called Healthspace. < Here > is the story. This quote by the clinical informatics director, Dr Charles Gutteridge, citing reasons for shutting it down, is insightful:
I had previously read journal articles citing this as a failure, or at least there being no real benefit to eHealth technologies like personal health records:"It is too difficult to make an account; it is too difficult to log on; it is just too difficult," he said.
Greenhalgh T, Hinder S, Stramer K, Bratan T, Russell J. Adoption, non-adoption, and abandonment of a personal electronic health record: case study of HealthSpace. BMJ. 2010 Nov 16;341:c5814. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c5814
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