1 / 51

Web Strategies for Health Communication

Web Strategies for Health Communication. Dan Hoch, Ph.D., MD Neurologist/Epilepsy specialist, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA Director, Benson Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine Digital Programs Associate Editor, AAN.COM. Tom Ferguson 1943-2006. Http://www.acor.org/tom.

rasha
Télécharger la présentation

Web Strategies for Health Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Web Strategies for Health Communication • Dan Hoch, Ph.D., MD • Neurologist/Epilepsy specialist, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA • Director, Benson Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine Digital Programs • Associate Editor, AAN.COM

  2. Tom Ferguson1943-2006 Http://www.acor.org/tom

  3. From a medical anthropologist’s point of view, much of what happens in the healthcare system we’ve all grown up with is invisible to most clinicians. Dianna Forsythe

  4. Clarification • Internet vs. Web • Web as platform • Other platforms- • Chat • Telepresence • Virtual worlds • Communication as ONE tool • Content • Conversations • Community • Other tools e.g. tracking software

  5. The MGH experience • Bring clinicians together using modern technology circa 1993—limited success • Bring patients together circa 1995- unlimited success • Groups formed in response to users, not at whim of providers • Content and direction of groups defined by users

  6. BrainTalk.org At it’s peak: • 50K registered users • 10 times that many viewers • Over 250 groups for discussion of various neurological disease and related issues

  7. The Epilepsy Forum: Who uses it? Sample was 155 primary posts from Feb 1995 through March 1997 Total posts = 3,881 Total hits =246,471

  8. What were the users doing?

  9. Public Epilepsy Forum Information Requested:

  10. Observations about online groups • Static content not a priority • The conversation is critical • Providers don‘t often take an interest • Providers are not usually excluded, but special interests, hidden agendas, etc, are NOT welcome. • Face to face encounters are often discussed as “lacking” especially with regard to knowledge transfer

  11. Some User Innovations on Braintalk.org • Club Avonex • People Living with Parkinson’s Disease • Brigadoon Island in Second Life • Dreams Island in Second Life

  12. Patientweb • “Regional” online resource • Closed, secure • All members were patients of Partners Healthcare Epilepsy treatment programs • About 120 users • Funded by NLM

  13. PatientWeb Resources • Content “approved” by providers • Discussion boards • Private messaging with providers • Feedback and ways to request added content • Synchronous Chat

  14. PatientWeb Observations • Widely appreciated and used • According to logs, some patients who didn’t even use it were extremely excited to have it available • Messaging with providers>discussion with other users>content>chat

  15. Social Web • Web 2.0 • Internet 2.0 ? • Integration of cellular technology • Remote sensor technology • “Presence” • GPS • Taging • Filtering

  16. “Strategies”- and Barriers to Entry Circa 1994 • Desktop computer ($) • Sever software ($) • Time and know-how ($$$) Circa 2009 • No computer • No Server • Time and Know-how ($) • Facebook? Free, Twitter? Free. Web Hosting? Free

  17. What are the barriers? • Physicians are users of personal electronics at rates commensurate with their socio-economic status • 60% of the population uses the internet to access health data • “Other” technology has become essential to medical care • From Telephones to ICU monitoring to Robotic Surgery So why is the field of medical care 20 years behind other industries in digitization?

  18. Perspective • 56 million Americans seek online information about chronic illness • Almost 80 million have become members of some kind of online support group. • Yahoo alone has 30,000 health related support groups Pew Internet and American Life, 2005

  19. Hoch’s totally subjective and unsupported list of barriers to adoption • #3- a (possibly) misplaced concern about privacy

  20. Hoch’s totally subjective and unsupported list of barriers to adoption • #2-Disruption of work flow • Present incentives, bureaucratic regulations and medical legal atmosphere discourage innovation/adoption

  21. Hoch’s totally subjective and unsupported list of barriers to adoption • #1- Devaluation of the skills for which physicians have been selected and valued

  22. Future Roles • Physicians • Nurses • Extenders and ancillaries • Medical librarians/Health communications • Patients and caregivers • Researchers • Private practice • Academic settings

  23. The Professionally Centered Medical Paradigm, 20th Century

  24. The e-Patient-Centered Medical Paradigm, 21st Century

  25. Interactive Web

  26. Anxiety and Depression Tools

  27. Cisco HealthPresence: remote delivery of care • HealthPresence unit: • TelePresence • Connected medical devices • Cisco employee clinic: • San Jose -- Los Angeles • Retail network

  28. Virtual Worlds: “Ignore them at your peril”-McKinsey & Company, Consulting The 3D Web is born! It won't be the proprietary Second Life ® owned by Linden Lab in 2015…Second Life will then become one out of many commercial, value-added providers…. Thinking otherwise would be like thinking 15 years ago that the (2D) Web will be proprietary, owned and run by a single company like Microsoft!)’ –M.N.K. Boulos – Senior Lecturer in Health Informatics at University of Plymouth

  29. Write down these sites: • http://slhealthy.wetpaint.com • http://healthcybermap.org

  30. Why the focus on Second Life ®? • Open Scripting Language • Intellectual property remains with creator • Extremely rich user created content • Size and popularity • Has markets and economy • Users are already very actively pursuing health-related activities

  31. HealthInfo Island • http://infoisland.org/2008/05/05/final-project-report-for-healthinfo-island-project-in-second-life-now-available/

  32. Second Health

  33. Palomar West Hospital

  34. What about the actual provision of care? • Role of users • Self Organizing • Organic growth Dreams Island

  35. What about the actual provision of care? • Role of users • Self Organizing • Organic growth Dreams Island

  36. Speed Builds

  37. Teaching the relaxation response in SL:Center for Connected HealthBenson Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine

  38. Method-1 • Selected an existing 8 week course presently taught face to face • Developed a virtual area in SL space owned by CCH • Identified exercises and teachings from the face to face program for presentation in SL, and created the curriculum.

  39. Method-2 • Recruitment of present users of SL via in world and real world ads, as well as word of mouth • Face to face consent obtained • Validated measures filled out in face to face meetings before and after the 8 week program.

  40. Method-3 • Bi-Weekly meetings • Share our domains of knowledge • Greater usability • Authenticity of clinical practice • Explore the capability of the technology • Maintained end-user perspective • Acclimated team to virtual environment • Feedback on the real-world program translation

  41. Method-4 • We did not want to overly develop the environment with the technology • Providing a preconceived notion of a self-initiated practice • Only material that would have played a role during the face-to-face session

  42. Method-5 • To encourage group exchange • participants were granted creation privileges. • 24/7 access promoted the idea that the virtual space was a resource itself • group text-chat acknowledged as form of legitimate communication

  43. Tour of the space:

More Related