Thursday, September 3, 2015

Health Care Social Media is developing new possibilities by offering more international cooperation among health institutions.

Health Care Social Media is developing new possibilities by offering  more international cooperation among health institutions.



Department of Health Sciences, has won an international award for his research into social media and healthcare.










Dr Damian Roland (pictured), Honorary Senior Lecturer in the Department of Health Sciences, has won an international award for his research into social media and healthcare.
The consultant in paediatric emergency care at Leicester’s Hospitals has been awarded first prize in the Stanford Medicine X | Symplur Signals Research Challenge 2015 and will present his work to the Medicine X conference at Stanford University in California on Sunday 27 Sept

Doctor wins international award for social media and healthcare research — University of Leicester

The Challenge is a joint venture by Stanford University and healthcare social media analysts Symplur. The competition aims to encourage research into social media, healthcare and the benefits this can offer to patients.
Dr Roland, who is part of the SAPPHIRE (Social Science APPlied to Healthcare Improvement REsearch) group teamed up with Dr Daniel Cabrera, of Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, and Jesse Spur BN, of the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, to secure the top prize. The trio impressed judges with their research which used social media analytics to interrogate Twitter data and give credence to an online healthcare community – to the extent that it can be defined as a community of practice.
The team focused on the Free Open Access Medical education (FOAM) community of healthcare professionals who collaborate online to share knowledge. They interrogated the Twitter #FOAMed hashtag using Symplur Signals analytics tool.

Sir William Osler, one of the first progenitors of Social Media

Dr Roland said: “The analytics showed millions of impressions recorded over a set period and also revealed it is a community that is growing. The #FOAMed community has proved very popular and uses the power of social media. It is truly what a community of practice can be defined as.  It shows that through Twitter healthcare professionals are educating each other and this is benefiting the patients they work with.”
Why FOAM?... Facts, Fallacies and Foibles

  1. 1. FREE OPEN ACCESS MEDUCATION
  2. 2. h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/foam/  
  3. 3. h"p://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2013/03/flipped-­‐classroom-­‐future-­‐medicine.html  
  4. 4. “…and to teach them this art — if they desire to learn it — WITHOUT fee and covenant” h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/from-­‐hippocrates-­‐to-­‐osler-­‐to-­‐foam/  
  5. 5. Photo  from  h"ps://www.mcgill.ca/library/branches/osler/oslerbio  
  6. 6. Taking  the   world  by   STORM (in  a  small  way) Photo  by  JD  Hancock  
  7. 7. 230 EMCC  blogs      in  24 Countries   h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/emcc-­‐blog-­‐update-­‐2013/  
  8. 8. IT  KEEPS  GETTING  BIGGER…   >30,000  page  views  daily  
  9. 9. Your  students  will     leave you behind
  10. 10. FOAM     =   Social Media
  11. 11. FOAM     =   Social Media
  12. 12. FREE OPEN ACCESS MEDUCATION
  13. 13. A  waste     of  Mme?  
  14. 14. Photo  from  smacc.net.au  
  15. 15. #Hashtags   Ce  tweets  together       #FOAMed   #FOAMcc   #smaccGOLD  
  16. 16. #smacc2013
  17. 17. No   Peer Review =    Bad?
  18. 18. Image  from     h"p://raMonallyspeaking.blogspot.com.au/2012/01/radical-­‐reform-­‐for-­‐peer-­‐review.html  
  19. 19. Publish then     Filter  
  20. 20. Translate and disseminate knowledge
  21. 21. Source  unknown  
  22. 22. Flip  the  Classroom   h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/2009/07/web-­‐20-­‐for-­‐emergency-­‐physicians/  
  23. 23. That’s just in time…
  24. 24. Tacit  knowledge   sharing   Photo  credit:     stefan  
  25. 25. Nothing  replaces  the     bedside mentor Photos  of  Sir  William  Osler  from  www.collecMonscanada.gc.ca  
  26. 26.   License   Image  credit:  zipckr  
  27. 27. Filter  Failure h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/2009/07/informaMon-­‐overload/  
  28. 28. “I  don’t  have  Cme  not   to  use  social  media”   Bertalan  Mesco h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/2009/07/informaMon-­‐overload/  
  29. 29. CAVEAT EMPTOR   Think  criMcally  
  30. 30. Lobotomise, blood let, and perform EGDT!
  31. 31. A jackass in the real world will be a jackass online Photo  by  publicenergy  
  32. 32. Photo  by  MisterSnappy  
  33. 33. Photo  from  The  MAtrix  
  34. 34. TO  GET  #FOAMed
  35. 35. h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/blog-­‐news/li]l-­‐review/  
  36. 36. h"p://googlefoam.com  
  37. 37. h"p://iteachem.net/2013/06/ten-­‐Mps-­‐for-­‐foam-­‐beginners/  
  38. 38. InfoamaMca.org  
  39. 39. It is up to us to save the world! The  22nd  of  Peter  Safar’s     Laws  for  the  NavigaCon  of  Life   h"p://lifeinthefastlane.com/2009/04/laws-­‐for-­‐the-­‐navigaMon-­‐of-­‐life/  



Doctor wins international award for social media and healthcare research — University of Leic

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Oliver Sacks Dies at 82; Neurologist and Author Explored the Brain’s Quirks - The New York Times


Oliver Sacks as portrayed by Robin Williams in   "The Awakening"

Oliver Sacks Dies at 82; Neurologist and Author Explored the Brain’s Quirks - The New York Times

Mental Health Access in Critical Condition



Jamycheal Mitchell, 24, had been held in Virginia jail without bail for nearly four months, accused of stealing a Mountain Dew, Snickers bar and a Zebra Cake was found dead on the floor of his jail cell 







after spending almost four months behind bars without bail for stealing groceries worth $5.
Jamycheal Mitchell, who had mental health problems, was discovered lying on the floor of his cell by guards early last Wednesday, according to authorities. While his body is still awaiting an autopsy, senior prison officials said his death was not being treated as suspicious.
“As of right now it is deemed ‘natural causes’,” Natasha Perry, the master jail officer at the Hampton Roads regional jail in Portsmouth, said of his death in an interview. Perry said there were no obvious outward signs of injury to the 24-year-old’s body. Portsmouth police are looking into the death.
Mitchell’s family said they believed he starved to death after refusing meals and medication at the jail, where he was being held on misdemeanour charges of petty larceny and trespassing. A clerk at Portsmouth district court said Mitchell was accused of stealing a bottle of Mountain Dew, a Snickers bar and a Zebra Cake worth a total of $5 from a 7-Eleven.
“His body failed,” said Roxanne Adams, Mitchell’s aunt. “It is extraordinary. The person I saw deceased was not even the same person.” Adams, who is a registered nurse, said Mitchell had practically no muscle mass left by the time of his death.
Except for a brief item stating that an inmate had been found dead, the story of Mitchell’s death has not been covered by local media in Virginia, and is reported for the first time here.
Adams said in an interview that her nephew had bipolar disorder and schizophrenia for about five years. Nicknamed Weezy, he lived with his mother Sonia and had been unable to hold down work. “He just chain-smoked and made people laugh,” said Adams. “He never did anything serious, never harmed anybody.”
Officials said that after his arrest, Mitchell was taken to Portsmouth city jail, where he stayed for almost three weeks before being transferred across the city to the regional jail on 11 May.
Ten days after that, the court clerk said, Judge Morton Whitlow ruled Mitchell was not competent to stand trial and ordered that he be transferred to Eastern State hospital, a state-run mental health facility in Williamsburg, for treatment.
The clerk said that typically in such cases “we do an order to restore the defendant to competence, send it to the hospital, and when the hospital has a bed, we do a transportation order, and he’s taken to the hospital.” Whitlow reiterated the order on 31 July and was due to review the case again on 4 September, according to the clerk.
But the hospital said it had no vacancy and the 24-year-old was therefore detained in jail until his death on 19 August, according to Adams, Mitchell’s aunt, who said she had tried to assist the hospitalisation process herself but was left frustrated.
Except for a brief item stating that an inmate had been found dead, the story of Mitchell’s death has not been covered by local media in Virginia, and is reported for the first time here.
Adams said in an interview that her nephew had bipolar disorder and schizophrenia for about five years. Nicknamed Weezy, he lived with his mother Sonia and had been unable to hold down work. “He just chain-smoked and made people laugh,” said Adams. “He never did anything serious, never harmed anybody.”
Officials said that after his arrest, Mitchell was taken to Portsmouth city jail, where he stayed for almost three weeks before being transferred across the city to the regional jail on 11 May.
Ten days after that, the court clerk said, Judge Morton Whitlow ruled Mitchell was not competent to stand trial and ordered that he be transferred to Eastern State hospital, a state-run mental health facility in Williamsburg, for treatment.
The clerk said that typically in such cases “we do an order to restore the defendant to competence, send it to the hospital, and when the hospital has a bed, we do a transportation order, and he’s taken to the hospital.” Whitlow reiterated the order on 31 July and was due to review the case again on 4 September, according to the clerk.
But the hospital said it had no vacancy and the 24-year-old was therefore detained in jail until his death on 19 August, according to Adams, Mitchell’s aunt, who said she had tried to assist the hospitalisation process herself but was left frustrated.




Young black man jailed since April for alleged $5 theft found dead in cell | US news | The Guardian

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

New breed of paramedics treats patients before emergencies occur - LA Times

When  does a paramedic become a independent health care provider. The line between physicians, nurses, physicians assistance is  becoming blurred as the future of health care evolves.



Paramedic Jacob Modglin parks on a palm-lined street in Oxnard and jumps out of his ambulance. 
He is prepared for any kind of emergency.
But his patient is standing in the driveway of a one-story house, holding a thermos, and smiling. It's time for his 8 p.m. appointment.
Modglin is part of a new cadre of "community paramedics" working in a dozen pilot programs across California. Their jobs are to treat patients before they get sick enough to need emergency care.
Many insurance companies and healthcare providers are seeking to curb spending by focusing on the small number of patients who drive the majority of costs. These so-called super-utilizers often have chronic conditions or other social problems that keep sending them to hospital emergency rooms and racking up big bills.
A patient who visits an emergency room unnecessarily or is repeatedly admitted to a hospital, for instance, could be suffering from a chronic medical condition, or may not be able to afford medicine, or may be too frail to go pick up fresh food — or all of the above.
That makes it difficult to know how to assist these patients. But California healthcare leaders hope these specially trained community paramedics can help.
"There's a missing link in the chain here and we don't know what that is, but we're trying to find out," said Dr. Steven Rottman, medical director of the UCLA Center for Prehospital Care, which trained the community paramedics.
Willl this become the next standard of care ?  

In Ventura County, Modglin administers tuberculosis medicine to infected patients. Health officials there are worried about the illness — especially some cases that appear drug-resistant — and believe paramedics are in the best position to help stop its spread by providing patients with pills each day at their homes.

This may be useful during times when paramedics are idle, however sudden emergency 911 calls may divert these first responders to a timely  call.  Using paramedic-firemen seems to be a shortcut that will fail.

In addition to that who reimburses for the preventive medicine care?  Is this a public service ordinarily paid for by the taxpayer. Does the insurance company save money by  cost shifting to the tax payers?

Chatting under a fruit tree in the house's frontyard, they also talk about the patient's diabetes and the medicine that controls his high blood pressure. Modglin takes a look at the man's knee, because he slipped and fell earlier in the day.
"Not only do I administer his TB medicine, but I'm here to make sure his overall health is good," Modglin said.
Ventura County runs the tuberculosis program and another that sends paramedics to the homes of hospice patients.
Los Angeles County has two initiatives as well, gearing up next month. In one, community paramedics in Glendale will visit patients with congestive heart failure within three days of their discharge from the hospital. They will try to make sure those patients — who typically have high readmission rates — are following their doctors' recommendations and living in an environment that's conducive to recovery.
With the advent of telemedicine it may allow physician supervision of first responders, much like first responders who communicate with an emergency  room in  transit as they treat a critically ill patient, such as in shock or in cardiac arrest.
As this concept spread there should be a careful evaluation. In 2017, researchers from UC San Francisco will evaluate the programs' success.
California's modern version of these emergency responders originated with a pilot program in Los Angeles County in the late 1960s as people started to take note of a high number of cardiac arrest deaths occurring outside hospitals. In 1970, California became the first state in the nation to allow paramedics to perform advanced medical life support.
But these days, Glendale paramedic Todd Tucker estimates that 10% to 20% of his calls aren't medical emergencies.
"We get called for you-name-it," said the Glendale fire captain, who's part of both Los Angeles County pilot programs. 










New breed of paramedics treats patients before emergencies occur - LA Times