HealthcareIT News summarizes six points from a talk by Jessie Gruman, president of the Center of Advancing Health. Gruman’s had cancer four times, so has ample personal expertise on the topic.
I agree with many but not all of her points, and would add one or two more. Her six objectives are:
HealthcareIT News summarizes six points from a talk by Jessie Gruman, president of the Center of Advancing Health. Gruman’s had cancer four times, so has ample personal expertise on the topic.
I agree with many but not all of her points, and would add one or two more. Her six objectives are:
- To find information quickly –specific answers on specific topics
- To have information streamlined –to make it easy to find and understand
- A clear understanding of the aging population –such as that not all seniors have adult children who can help them with social media
- To be engaged –since most patients don’t really keep up to date
- To help with the practical parts of care –such as payment and paperwork
- To help with the healing process –to help patients take care of themselves
One minor quibble: it seems to me all these points could be made about the Internet in general and are not very specific to social media. With that said, I’d like to see more of the following:
- Online communications between doctors and patients
- Real-time responses to queries
- Suggestions of what questions to ask next, not just the ability to find answers to questions I already have
- An opportunity to find people in similar circumstances
- “Prosumer” resources that go beyond the easy-to-read to delve into difficult topics where questions are ambiguous
- Integration with the medical record, giving the patient control over how much information to release and to whom