Archive for the ‘medical education’ Category

Education Network to Advance Cancer Clinical Trials (ENACCT)

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

ENACCT

As the technology partner to the Education Network to Advance Cancer Clinical Trials (ENACCT),  we are pleased to announce the launch of the re-designed Website, ENACCT.org.  ENACCT is a leading not-for-profit organization dedicated to improving access to cancer clinical trials through education and collaboration with communities, health care providers, and researchers.  (more…)

5 Reasons Why Twitter Is Relevant To Healthcare

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Twitter.com, the widely-popular, free Web 2.0 platform that delivers short, real-time text messages to your social network of friends and colleagues, is slowly gaining traction in the healthcare market.  Consistent with my fifteen years of experience as both a healthcare professional, technologist and social media expert, consumer and patient advocacy groups are leading the way in experimenting with Twitter and other social media tools when compared to the medical professional education organizations (e.g., associations, pharmaceutical and medical device companies, medical education companies, academia).

Over the past few months, I have conducted my own personal experiment to evaluate the benefits and limitations of Twitter as a social media tool to advance my professional development.  Similarly, I have also reached out to my friends and colleagues, who are leaders in patient advocacy and continuing medical education, to gauge their current use, knowledge and/or future interest in leveraging Twitter as part of their organization’s Web, marketing, and social media strategy.   I will create a summary of those discussions in a separate post, but I have heard everything from:

  • “Huhh?”
  • “I can barely wrap my head around our Website.”
  • “It is noise.”
  • “I tried it for a week and don’t get it.”
  • “Yes.  We have tried a number of different pilots and are finally getting some pull-through.”
  • “I am addicted.”

I do not believe the wide spectrum of responses are uncommon and I continue to work with my friends and colleagues on developing a different understanding and appreciation of social media within their healthcare enterprise:)

So here are the five reasons why I believe Twitter is relevant to healthcare:

  1. Professional Networking: Hands-down, I have found the professional networking capabilities of Twitter to be the most valuable benefit.  When I first setup my account, I immediately “followed” people I knew from my favorite blogs and podcasts (aka “Twitter Celebrities”).  However, I was quickly disappointed by this approach.  Many of these high-profile Twitterers offered little in the way of the golden nuggets of information and commentary I was looking for.  Instead, I received rambling posts like:  “My baby just threw macaroni at me!” or “Starbucks has the best coffee”.  Who cares?  Not me (personal preference).  So I refined my Twitter approach, “unfollowed” many of those celebrities, and began to follow some of the people who were replying interesting posts to those celebrities or I had found through Twitter Search.  Twitter.com has powerful built-in search and connection features that enables you to see other people’s interests, read their posts, and easily follow them with a click of a button. Today, I have developed a wonderful network of people who provide a wealth of information related to my professional interests (e.g., continuing medical education, pharmaceutical marketing, patient advocacy, social media, Web 2.0).  In the absence of Twitter, it would have been very difficult to rapidly find and network with such interesting group of people outside of my normal professional circles.
  2. Research: Twitter has become my real-time “stock ticker” of healthcare and technology news, commentary, and events.  Not a day goes by that I do not receive a number of interesting posts on new CME programs, different applications of Web technologies to health education, and new research on how medical professionals and patients are engaging social media.  For example, I recently received a post that the Pew Internet & American Life Project had just released a new study, “The Social Life of Health Information” authored by Susannah Fox.  I am, like many of us, a huge fan of Susannah’s research.  I was immediately able to follow the post’s link, download the research report, and also follow and communicate with Susannah about her work.  The whole process took about 5 minutes (longer to read the research paper:), I am better informed about e-patients, and I am able to speak in real-time with the author about her findings.
  3. Marketing and Visibility: Twitter offers the potential to reach millions of people.  Within healthcare, I believe Twitter presents tremendous viral marketing opportunities for the dissemination of new and innovative health research and initiatives.  I have seen a number of organizations, such as the Cleveland Clinic, the Lance Armstrong Foundation, and the Centers for Disease Control, begin to leverage Twitter as part of their social marketing strategy to promote new health initiatives, announce new CME programs, and create a personal relationship with the public.  The posts are sent out to their thousands of followers who then “retweet” the posts to their followers, and so on.  Pretty soon, they have exponentially reached thousands of people by taking 15 seconds to type a short post with a link.  Personal example: When we launched the new version of The Wellness Community Online, an innovative Website that provides free, real-time support to cancer survivors,  I tweeted out an announcement to my network. My followers then retweeted my post to their followers. In addition, I asked Doug Ulman, CEO of the Lance Armstrong Foundation and who has 327,000 followers, to retweet my post. He did and we saw a substantial increase in traffic to the site, which will hopefully assist people with cancer in coping with their illness.  Cost: Nothing.  Impact: Huge.  Powerful stuff!!!    
  4. Professional Development: In addition to the wealth of educational opportunities (e.g., conferences, seminars) I have found through Twitter, I have also been very impressed by how healthcare professionals are able to put together impromptu gatherings at local restaurants or universities to discuss healthcare education and technology.  In March, I found Twitter posts about putting together an “un-conference” called HealthCamp Philadelphia.  The event’s objectives, agenda, and logistics were largely coordinated through Twitter and a free WordPress blog.  No expensive in-person planning meetings or printed marketing materials were required.  The result was a wonderful, low-cost conference on the role of social media and Web 2.0 technologies, which was attended by healthcare professionals and technologists alike.
  5. It is One More Tool in our Social Media Arsenal: Twitter is not THE answer to social media.  It is, however, a powerful addition to any healthcare organization’s social media strategy.  When used appropriately, Twitter can exponentially raise awareness about research, case studies, new initiatives, and news.  Personally, I can say that by spending a couple of minutes a day, I have gained a tremendous amount of knowledge and developed a wealth of new connections with some people doing some amazing work in healthcare technology.  Try it, experiment with it, and revise your usage strategy until you find one that best suits your needs.

I am sure that we all could come up with an endless list of how Twitter and other social media technologies can and are benefiting healthcare and our professional development.  I am hopeful that the healthcare community will be more willing to “test the waters” with Twitter as part of their social media strategy.  On a technical note, I rarely use the Twitter.com Website for my tweets.  Instead, I use two free applications:  TweetDeck on my desktop and Twitterrific on my iPhone.

Social Media and Pharmaceutical Marketing; Medscape’s New iPhone CME App

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009
  • Social Media: The Science of Eavesdropping – Medical Marketing and Media – Healthcare marketing professionals have come to recognize the increase in consumer conversations related to diagnoses, treatments and other topics. They are happening in online social networks, on search engines and at customer contact centers. The pressing question is: How do I best measure these conversations to gain insight for my communications programs?
  • WebMD to launch Medscape iPhone app – Medical Marketing and Media – The app will provide docs with a free mobile drug reference database and drug interaction checker, as well as Medscape's specialty-focused professional news. Medscape CME will be available as well, with mobile CME activities and credits automatically tracked in the Medscape CME tracker.
  • Social Strategy for Exciting (and Boring) Brands – There are two kinds of brands in the world. If you are a marketer, you know what I mean. There are brands people like to talk about, and brands they don’t.

To Open Source or Not To Open Source…That is the Question

Friday, September 12th, 2008

The recent expansion of open source Web and e-learning technologies to continuing medical education, pharmaceutical training, and consumer health will have a significant impact upon multiple aspects of our healthcare system. Prior to 2004, there was a blind allegiance to using big brand, proprietary technologies, such as Microsoft .NET and WebEx, to create online training initiatives. This approach was often expensive and offered little in the way of real innovation and measurable outcomes. In fact, educators didn’t think much about IT’s selections, programmers did not know much about e-learning best practices, and many seemed happy to post a static Website with a couple PDF or PowerPoint files, and stamp it “e-learning.”

Today, things are changing for the better. Best practices for content and technology are being published, outcomes measurement is being discussed, and recent Web innovations are changing the way people use the Web. Commonly referred to as Web 2.0, this phenomenon describes the read/write nature of people’s interactions with Websites and the peer-to-peer networking, communication, and content generation. As a result, there is a high demand for new software that is stable, inexpensive, and can be easily customized with new features. Many proprietary software companies have not been able to keep up with demand and the speed of the ever changing technology environment. Consequently, ehealth firms such as ours who have long embraced the open source movement are able fill that gap and provide academic medical centers, pharmaceutical and medical device firms, hospitals, and medical associations with robust Web communication and training platforms at a fraction of the cost and production time of proprieatary vendors.

All though there are many open source applications, we continue to be very enthusiastic about our experience with two open source platforms that we believe are “game changers” in health communications:

  • Drupal: A robust content management system equipped with powerful features, such as: peer-to-peer networking, content personalization, role-based publishing, blogs, discussion forums, multimedia support, news syndication and much more. Drupal has an enormous community of contributing software developers, which have contributed over 4,000 additional modules/features freely available online.
  • Moodle: Largely considered the best on the market, this full-featured learning management system is perfect for continuing medical education and pharmaceutical salestraining. The software can be fully customized to integrate with membership databases, manage registrations, administer courses, assessments, and certificates, and conduct outcomes reporting all from a Web interface. The system support all types of courseware, including SCORM and video, and is 508-compliant.

Key advantages of open source software:

  1. Freedom: You have the source code and, therefore, you have he freedom to customize that application to function as exactly how you would like.
  2. No Licensing Fees: While there are software development costs associated configuration and hosting, there are no licensing fees like you see when you purchase Windows Vista or Microsoft Office.
  3. Collective Wisdom: Most well-established open source platforms, such as Moodle and Drupal, have hundreds or thousands of programmers who contribute code to improve the functionality, address security, and provide support. It is one of the most exciting aspects about the open source movement.
  4. Mash-Ups: Given that the source code is freely available, you combine one application with another to develop a completely new feature set and/or application.
  5. Decreased production cycle: You have the source code, the documentation, and access to a community of fellow developers. Combine that with an intuitive user experience, clean design, and sound planning/customization/testing, and you will quickly see a return on your investment.
  6. Too many more to list…


MedBiquitous Annual Conference Announced

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

The MedBiquitous Annual Conference will take place on April 28-30, 2009 in Baltimore, MD. MedBiquitous, the ANSI-accredited developer of IT standards for healthcare education and competence assessment, was founded in 2001 by Johns Hopkins to develop a blueprint for XML Web services. This year’s conference will focus on:

  • Communities of practice
  • E-learning
  • Learning management systems
  • Social networking
  • Virtual patient simulations
  • Web 2.0
  • And many other topics…

We plan to be there and hope to have our abstract accepted discussing our experience with integrating Drupal and Moodle to create Web 2.0 communities of practice and learning evironments. The Call for Abstracts due date is November 1st, 2008. Hope to see you all there!