Archive for August 1st, 2008

Photo Friday: Extroverted East Coast

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 20%
1 comment


Yogato Yogato

This week’s photograph confirms Richard Florida’s research (just a little) about extroverted types being closer to the Atlantic than the Pacific Ocean.

Frozen yogurt is back. In a big way. As a Generation Y customer in line told me, “(large ice cream chain) is doomed.” I really enjoy a place where people are easy to engage, and they walk to get places. In this case it’s to one where the product sold is only 25 calories per ounce. Not bad! (More pictures of the atmosphere are here, this place is Web2.0 enabled)

Upend(ing) the Cozy World of Medical Publishing?

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 26%
6 comments

I am always delighted to meet other physician bloggers, and such was the case with Bob Wachter, MD, who’s a physician that blogs, and from within academia. That’s rare, and welcomed, by me for sure.

He recently wrote this piece, Will Knols and Blogs Upend the Cozy World of Medical Publishing?, which echoes several ideas I have been having since I started blogging, especially around the idea of, as he calls it, “the democratization of peer review.” (I’m focusing on the comments about medical publishing – the world of Knols appears to be experiencing a rocky ride)

As I occasionally get requests to write for peer reviewed journals or books or I consider writing for them, I have been pausing to ask, “why?”

This is especially when the difference is between instant access and feedback to the people I serve, versus a smaller group of individuals with (potentially) limited experience in the ideas I’m writing about, and the medium I use to write them in. I say this without any predjudice to the publishing community – I am just not sure where physicians in my generation will fit in moving forward, unless the model is changed.

Bob refers to the difference between “Having an article peer reviewed by 3 experts is different than having 17 Joe Six-packs;” however, I’m not sure what the difference is, depending on the issue, between those two constituencies – what’s an expert in if she/he isn’t a person “just like me?” Also, what’s the value of a single (relatively speaking), private, review, that will be locked in time and space, forever? Robert Scoble speaks well to this in the post “Scoble Defends Blogging (Again), and He’s Right (Again).”

I do not work in academia, where people are incentivized/rewarded for the number of peer-reviewed publications with their names on them. I think a deeper question that should be asked, is, “What’s the best way, in this millennium, to produce portable knowledge that can be used by others?” I have talked with innovators in academia who have not shared their knowledge because of the effort required to publish to medical journals. That’s unfortunate.

How could the reward/incentive system in academia be reconfigured to respect the many different ways people can share knowledge, and put them to use to help people? I think it could be, and in turn a lot of great ideas could be unleashed.

Bob mentions in his post that he submitted his piece to two medical journals, who rejected it. However, we still get to read it thanks to Web 2.0.

I’m not even going to try with this one. And I sort of don’t have to.

BarCamp wiki / HealthCampDc

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 10%
0 comments | Leave a reply
  • BarCamp wiki / HealthCampDc – For people who want to look at other ways of convening, in an area that interests all of us (Health 2.0), this is worth checking out.

Health-Care Reform, Corporate-Style

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 12%
0 comments | Leave a reply
  • Health-Care Reform, Corporate-Style – Toyota and others are opening onsite medical centers. It's possible that employers in this situation are most able to have a societal perspective.

Living in a walkable city is healthier

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 10%
0 comments | Leave a reply

Creative Class » Blog Archive » Happy Jobs, American-style – Creative Class

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 16%
0 comments | Leave a reply