A study of the key qualities of healthcare that influence patient appraisal of satisfaction with primary care. Content analysis revealed that patients perceive and value at least seven domains of healthcare in defining outstanding quality (access, communication, personality and demeanor of provider, quality of medical care processes, care continuity, quality of the healthcare facilities, and office staff). All seven were cited as reasons for rating physicians as excellent, while four domains (communication, care coordination, interpersonal skills, and barriers to access) drove negative ratings.
Author: Editor
Doctors 2.0 – Patient Designed Care Recap
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If there is a universal language, its words are human feelings and its sentences are shared experiences. Healthcare, the state of being a patient or caring for someone who is a patient, is surely p…
See on www.nickdawson.net
Why Don’t e-Patients Take Their Pills? | Journal of Participatory Medicine
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Health professionals often feel frustrated or even angry when patients don’t take their medication. And patients may feel exasperated when prescribers seemingly ignore complaints about side effects.
See on www.jopm.org
Evaluation of a Web-Based Program Promoting Healthy Eating and Physical Activity for Adolescents
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This randomized clinical trial tested the impact of a website promoting nutrition and physical activity for adolescents (Teen Choice: Food and Fitness). Participants, (408) 12- to 17-year-old adolescents in the Houston area, completed online surveys measuring diet, physical activity, sedentary behavior and diet/physical activity mediators at baseline. After randomization, they were asked to log onto either the intervention or the control condition website weekly for 8 weeks to review web content and set goals to improve dietary and physical activity behaviors. Post-test occurred after 8 weeks. Logistic regression analyses and one-way analyses of covariance were used in the analyses. At post, more intervention group adolescents reported eating three or more daily vegetable servings in the past week compared with the control group (P < 0.05); both groups reported significant increases in physical activity (P < 0.001) and significant decreases in TV watching (P < 0.01). Average log on rate was 75% over the 8 weeks; there was no difference by condition. The website enabled adolescents to improve vegetable intake and daily physical activity, reduce sedentary behavior and had a high log on rate. Future research should identify effective methods for disseminating this website to wider audiences.
See on her.oxfordjournals.org
How to make the most of a medical conference: a personal reflection on EULAR 2013
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I have just returned from the annual European Rheumatology EULAR 2013 meeting in Madrid. This massive conference was attended by about 14,000 delegates, with over 500 ‘posters’ per day and over 230…
Some excellent suggestions here, particularly in relation to using Evernote
See on www.philipgardiner.me.uk
How one hospital is using mobile apps to gather feedback and improve services
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A feedback app at Birmingham children’s hospital allows patients to send comments directly to the manager in charge
See on www.guardian.co.uk
Healthcare: Don’t Fear the “What Ifs” in Social Media
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Interview with Farris K. Timimi, Medical Director of the Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
Why has healthcare, a profession that has roots firmly planted in the power of communication, been so reluctant to consider social networking and social media as forms of engagement? Whenever I visit with providers and organizations that seem hesitant to explore social networking, they usually share a series of reasons for their hesitancy, all of which fall into a broad category that I refer to as “what ifs.” What if we have a patient privacy violation? What if social media access makes our employees less efficient and productive? What if my already extensive clinical time demands prevent me from participating in social media? What if a mistake happens, and it is digitally advertised to a much larger audience? What if poor “phone hygiene” affects clinical care? (This brings to mind the seemingly common image of the intern who spends the bulk of morning rounds on a smartphone.)
Fundamentally, these potential concerns, these “what ifs,” and our resultant reluctance to meet our patients where they are spending the majority of their time, do more than limit our capacity for engagement.
See on blogs.einstein.yu.edu
How To Reach Your Audience Online (Infographic)
Facebook Helped Boost Organ Donor Registration Rates
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A Facebook project has helped significantly increased organ donor registration rates, according to a report published in the American Journal of Transplantation.
For the study, researchers from Johns Hopkins Medical Center — which helped launch the initiative — compared organ donor profile updates with donor registration data from 43 states and the District of Columbia (Lopatto, Bloomberg, 6/18).
The study found that on the day the Facebook feature went live:
More than 57,000 individuals added the organ donor label to their profiles ("Capsules," Kaiser Health News, 6/18); and13,054 individuals registered online to become organ donors, a 21.1-fold increase over the baseline average at that time of 616 registrations (Wiley, Medical News Today, 6/18).
After one year, 30,818 U.S. residents had registered online to be organ donors, about five times more than rates before the initiative, according to the study. The study authors said the increase in organ donation awareness is a step toward resolving a chronic shortage of organs available for transplant ("Capsules," Kaiser Health News, 6/18).
See on www.ihealthbeat.org
140 Health Care Uses for Twitter
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Twitter’s simplicity of functional design, speed of delivery and ability to connect two or more people around the world provides a powerful means of communication, idea-sharing and collaboration. There’s potency in the ability to burst out 140 characters, including a shortened URI. Could this power have any use in healthcare? After all, for example, doctors and nurses share medical information, often as short bursts of data (lab values, conditions, orders, etc.).
Mega list from Phil Bauman on how Twitter may be used for healthcare
See on philbaumann.com

