Posts Tagged ‘GenY’

“Give it to (the new generation of leaders) right now”; – Tea with The Economist

January 13th, 2010 | Popularity: 3%
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“Give it to (the new generation of leaders) right now” – Tea with The Economist – Interesting stoking of generational change by Bill George near the end of this interview, with attached hopeless comment by the interviewer at the end (“I worry that the old leadership regime will cling on”).

I see/hear that this “out with the old/in with the new” philosophy a lot, and I wonder if baby boomers are selling themselves short.

I have been meaning to write a post about my belief that generational differences are probably overplayed. I’ve amassed quite a few links about this, and point to this article that lends to the idea that the way people think is not tied to their generation as much as people think it is.

See what you think, comments welcome.

Now Reading: “Concern that sharing information with patients may cause sustained psychological distress is probably unfounded”

December 18th, 2009 | Popularity: 6%
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I’m not that smart and my ideas are not that unique.

This is why I enjoy writing the posts that are tagged “where we came from” on this blog.

The title of this one comes from a 1991 article published in the British Medical Journal about the idea of providing patients access to their complete medical record. To really dig deep, though, I wanted to grab the seminal 1973 article from The New England Journal of Medicine on this topic, and thanks to the Internet, I found it.

In Sounding board. Giving the patient his medical record: a proposal to improve the system (There appears to be a PDF of this article on the Internet here), authors Shenkin and Warner lay out some facts about the health system that don’t seem to different than those of today, sadly:

Dissatisfaction with the functioning of the medical care-system has become widespread. Four serious problems are maintaining high quality of care, establishing mutually satisfactory physician-patient relations, ensuring continuity and avoiding excessive bureaucracy.

Some differences were apparent in 1973, such as the fact that in 41 states, patients could only obtain their medical records through litigation (!). Also, it appears with the emergence of “centralized organization” though things like health maintenance organizations, that physician autonomy was under siege. The health system was considered at the time to be “decentralized to the penultimate step – the physician” and the fear was that their autonomy was “unchecked.”

All of that aside, the authors, quite visionary in my opinion, laid out an almost Web 2.0 version of the medical world.

They talked about the idea of “decentralized medical review.” A few quotes:

The freely available record would provide a more “longitudinal” view of a patient, and physicians would appreciate better (and treat better) the course of a disease. Since innovation proceeds mainly by the contagion effect, new knowledge would probably be put into practice more swiftly.

And this one

Decentralized peer review would provide recognition of excellence in the practice of medicine, and hence enhance the prestige of being a practicing physician. Patient records and the care that they reflected would become a source of pride open to the perusal of fellow professionals. The expected improvement in continuity would decrease frustrations, and improved physician-patient relations would add importantly to physician satisfaction.

Whoa. They are talking wisdom of crowds, viral innovation, and building trust through transparency. In 1973.

Flash forward to 1991. In The Right to Know, author McLaren discusses data from Denmark, which provided patients “statutory rights” to their entire hospital record, with no ill effects. He concludes:

The argument against giving patients greater access to their records has been lost; the challenge now is to get doctors skilled in writing records that their patients will find useful.

Whoa. He’s talking Meaningful Use.

1973 was before my medical time, but 1991 wasn’t. In 1991 I was in medical school, and I’m pretty sure if you asked me, “Ted, should your patients see what you wrote about them in that manila folder thing with paper?” I would have said, “Why shouldn’t they?”

Ironically, it’s probably the very group that opposed these viewpoints that are responsible for creating mine. Summer of 1991 was my first (and I think just one of 2) trips to the national meeting of the American Medical Association, in Chicago. That meeting was marked by protests from the HIV/AIDS community on the outside. And on the inside, after a week, I remember leaving with the thoughts, “I met a lot of great peers here, but who are these leaders who are resistant to technology and only allow heterosexual men to participate?* They aren’t me. And I’m not them.” This is the heritage of Generation X – we were groomed to be on the side of the patients.

So that’s my story, and the story of where we came from with regard to sharing medical records with patients. Has nothing happened in 18 years? Absolutely not.

  • The largest medical groups in the United States regularly share medical records with patients, online
  • Most patients have a “statutory right” to their hospital record, albeit, not in the most friendly or useful way (see this example from Tufts University)
  • Crowdsourcing, trustbuilding, and transparency are sweeping the business world. Health care is on the verge.
  • Generation X are the attending physicians and medical directors, Generation Y are graduating from their residencies.

In the Shenkin article, it was proposed that a law be passed to require that a “complete and unexpurgated copy of all medical records, both inpatient and outpatient, be issued routinely and automatically to patients as soon as the services provided are received.” They do a great job of covering every known objection, “firstly” through “ninthly.”

My favorite is of the fear of “poor quality review” by peers and patients. They said that in 1973, it is “safer for them (physicians) to measure adequacy by academic degrees achieved than by competence demonstrated.”

The great thing I have learned pretty solidly from so many people by 2009 is that the medical community has so much support from patients and families – they want them to be great, they will only help. One patient said this at a recent continuing education course to room of us: “Can I just say thank you for paying attention in medical school, you are in my thoughts, you have my full gratitude.”

Let’s please remember these words to keep the conversation about ending secrecy an easy one, not a hard one. And, carry these two articles in our back pockets at all times.

*The American Medical Association has since reversed its stance on discriminating against gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender physicians and patients.


How Gen Y & Boomers Will Reshape Your Agenda – HBR.org

October 19th, 2009 | Popularity: 2%
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How Gen Y & Boomers Will Reshape Your Agenda – HBR.org – “At Booz Allen, an innovative information and social networking site called Hello.bah.com drew in 36% of employees within a few months. Using blogs and wikis, it connects a workforce that spends a lot of time away from company offices—on the road, at client sites, and working from home. Internal sponsors told us that Hello.bah.com is not only improving information flows but also forging intergenerational relationships. Gen Ys are encouraging Boomers to join the site and teaching them how to utilize it effectively. Boomers are welcoming the chance to share know-how and business contacts with much younger colleagues. Informal mentoring is running both ways.”


STATS: Young People Are Flocking to Twitter

September 11th, 2009 | Popularity: 1%
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STATS: Young People Are Flocking to Twitter

“One of the most actively discussed topics in the Twitter universe over the past couple months has been the idea that teens don’t tweet – at least not as much as older demographics, and certainly not as actively as teens who use other popular social networking sites.

Now, it appears that this story may be shifting. According to new data from comScore, younger users – specifically those in the 12-17 and 18-24 year-old demographics – are Twitter’s fastest growing audience segment. “


Pew Research Center: Gen X: Online Grown-Ups

March 11th, 2009 | Popularity: 23%
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  • Pew Research Center: Gen X: Online Grown-Ups – The latest data on internet usage activities across generations. It appears GenY is facile with the use of the internet for pleasure, GenX for business. GenX is growing up….

Look at how Anna, 12, interacts with her world. She and her cohort are the patients (and the doctors) of the future.

October 11th, 2008 | Popularity: 20%
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(click any image to see it larger) This is Anna, she’s 12 years old, and I got to meet her because her mother is Jane Sarasohn-Kahn, author of one of my favorite heatlh care blogs, Health Populi, and came to DC and wondered if I might walk to meet them today, at my favorite Smithsonian museum. Twist my arm on many levels…

Those of you who are parents (or near Anna’s age) might not think this observation is that unique, so excuse my lateness to the game, but look at how Anna is interacting with the art in the museum. When we came to the exhibit she was interested in, she immediately grabbed her cell phone camera and started taking pictures. I asked Jane if she would look at them later and said she absolutely would. “It’s her scrapbook,” Jane said.

Anna goes to a school where she’s required to write a blog post every day, covering her assigned work, with one “free day,” each week, where she and her fellow students can write about whatever they want.

In Anna’s case, instead of passively taking in the art, she immediately begins creating content with it. And this is what she is being trained to do every day at school. What will Anna expect when she is 18 from her health care system? If Anna decides to train to be a physician, what will she expect from the systems (electronic and not) that are set up to enable her to care for patients?

In 2003, it was a pretty amazing thing to have a tethered PHR in place, for patients to see their health information on line. In ushering this new world, I could be heard to say to fellow physicians, “…and patients’ e-mail messages are limited to 3,000 characters, and no attachments!”

It’s very possible that Anna and her cohort won’t be looking to provide and receive care in systems that limit how much content patients can contribute to their health care experience. They may expect just the opposite, and want that the systems that support them help them manage this intelligently.

This example should give us some energy to think about really supporting participation in Health 2.0, the real thing.

With thanks to Jane and Anna for being great teachers, on and off stage. Come back to Washington anytime!

JAMA: It’s Official – there’s tension between older and younger physicians

August 25th, 2008 | Popularity: 30%
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I was alerted to this editorial by Susannah Fox’s post about it on e-patients.net, and I really liked that this topic (generational issues) is getting coverage in the medical literature:

JAMA — Web Searching for Information About Physicians, July 9, 2008, Gorrindo and Groves 300 (2): 213

The medical community is experiencing the same GenX, GenY, Baby Boomer challenge that everyone else is. I’ve written about it on this blog (See these posts, and these posts) quite a bit, as it took me awhile in my own professional work to realize what was going on – many of the discussions I was having seemed to be themed to the generation of the person I was talking to rather than the specific person. This turned out to be really helpful in creating understanding and collaboration.

I think we need each other, and if anything, my discovery (glass half-full) is that many baby boomers have the desire and ability to have their creativity unleashed. GenX-Y can and will help with that by stimulating the conversation (See my most recent read for a great example). I enjoy being sandwich guy (Gen X), it’s kind of like being a family physician, coordinating with all of the other medical and surgical specialists, all of whom add value to everything I do and (hopefully) vice versa.

Acknowledging the tension, and creating some more

I’m glad to see the authors call out that the tension exists, at the same time they create the tension they speak of in their advice, which is centered around the concept of being “aggressive” about “protecting” the physician:

Talking to Patients About How They Are Using the Internet. If a physician suspects that an Internet-savvy patient is engaged in seeking personal information about him or her, we recommend that the physician talk with the patient about the garnered information. This is particularly relevant when treating young adults or adolescents who commonly use the Internet. Physicians should clearly inform patients that the Internet is not a substitute for face-to-face conversation.

It’s not? Patients need to be talked to? We need to clearly inform them about how to use the Internet?

There’s a very cool alternative paradigm where we protect the patient, by clearly informing them about everything we are doing for and to them, and listen to them about how they use the Internet, so we can use it with them. It’s completely possible. The best part is that I’ve seen many a baby boomer embrace it. The future’s bright for our profession and those we serve….

Now Reading: “Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It: No Schedules, No Meetings, No Joke–the Simple Change That Can Make Your Job Terrific” (Cali Ressler, Jody Thompson)

August 25th, 2008 | Popularity: 49%
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As a leader in an organization, imagine reading this description of an employee’s workday:

A typical day for me includes waking up when my room is too bright from the sun and I can no longer sleep. I check my e-mail to make sure there are no pressing issues and respond to anyone who needs my input. I will typically watch an episode of South Park on the Internet, then walk to my local grocery store and buy some breakfast, even though it’s closer to lunch at this point. After eating I will work in front of my television with ESPN on in the background. At this point I will choose to go into the office or continue to work from home, or maybe not even work at all and go for a bike ride or jog. If there is still work to do later that night, I’ll do it then and it’s no big deal.

I’ll admit it – it kind of made me gulp when I read it.

At the same time, though, I have been in a lot of conversations with a lot of personal and professional colleagues over the past 3-4 years or so, where the question we’re asking ourselves is, “Is this how work life is supposed to be?” Spoken or unspoken, the answer is “we don’t think so.” Various companies’ data also show a trend toward less vacancy in their physical locations.

In the middle of that self-discovery, I read about BestBuy, Inc., (see “Smashing the Clock“). This is the book about their journey.

It’s time to let go and see what our employees can really do – BestBuy Manager

A Results Only Work Environment (ROWE) is as it says – one where results are measured, not time spent. There are no timeclocks, no discussion of time, and no “Sludge” as the authors refer to it. “Sludge” are the comments people make to each other about time, whether it’s about being late to a meeting, or working late at night. Simply put, the authors state, an employer is trading work for money. Why not give them what they pay for?

Reading beyond the BusinessWeek article was very useful – this is not flextime, it’s not “working from home,” it’s a different philosophy altogether. That includes the vignette above. Totally allowed, if you have the results to show for it. The concept can appear challenging; however, it makes sense, in the context of strong leadership committed to respecting employees and customers. That’s where I found similarities to the work I have done.

About respect

When I first read about this work, I asked about how this was similar or different from the LEAN transformation I participated in, in the area of health information technology. Some of the things were consistent, some seemed less so, like having technology teams physically present alongside doctors and nurses, guiding care and feeding of an electronic health record system.

My reconciliation of all of this rests with not comparing individual tools/approaches between ROWE and LEAN. What they both have in common is respect for the customer and staff, and strong leaders. It’s impressive that at the heart of the ROWE movement was (at the time) a 24 year old employee of BestBuy (Cali Ressler), who was dissatisfied with the status quo. The authors also explicitly reject war analogies in business as I have. In my own situation, there was not just a desire to change the way we worked, it was clear that not changing would be unsafe. Healthcare organizations across the country are now learning this, thankfully, but it’s a slow transformation, and the transformations that are happening are nowhere near as radical as ROWE, which is why I am interested in the movement (not because I want to be radical, but because the threats to our patients and their families’ health are so significant).

Just because you can no longer be late doesn’t mean you can be lame

Preliminary data from the University of Minnesota’s Flexible Work and Well-Being Center are showing that voluntary terminations are down, involuntary terminations are up.

Mea culpa and, as usual, I see analogies to health care

I liked the concepts in the book a lot, and have done a self-inventory of my own sludge and the sludge that’s been directed my way. The kind of sludge I get nowadays is really from people who want to understand better how technology can be used to help patients stay healthy. I welcome it as an opportunity to teach and learn. As the authors discussed, people can learn to live sludge-free, and they really want to live sludge-free. It starts with us.

I could see myself promoting ROWE in health care settings, and I think physicians, primary care ones especially, would benefit. The work I do to change health care is completely connected to the idea that health is a means, not an end, and people who go into health care want to support our patients where support is needed, mostly where they live, work, and play. I don’t believe people in health care are any more attached to time than Cali and Jody’s (former?) colleagues at BestBuy are. When I read the stories of BestBuy employees before and after, I reflected on some of the conversations I have had with health professionals (at all levels) who have really been challenged to juggle their passion for helping people and their ability to provide for themselves and their families, physically and emotionally. What would it be like for a family medicine or internal medicine specialist to provide their cognitive services to patients and families using a combination of virtual tools and office (or even home presence) when the situation called for it? Look at what HelloHealth is doing. It’s possible.

A Results Only Patient Experience (ROPE)?

A came upon this table in the book, and curiously, I found it extensible to our health care system. I hope I won’t get in trouble for using it to think about what our health care system were like if our patients experienced it the way a BestBuy employee experienced their work life. The edits are mine.

ROPE.jpg


Photo Friday: Friend Request Accepted

August 22nd, 2008 | Popularity: 23%
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friendrequestaccepted

I photographed this advertisement while riding on BART in San Francisco recently – it struck me as a creative way to engage Generation Y, and in 2008, a reminder that for some people, online connections are becoming dominant to in-person ones (that and the fact that no one is advertising to Generation X, we’re the generation lost to marketers…). I liked it also because it supports my occasional motto, “in person is the new online.” On a more basic level, though, it speaks to the revolution that Web2.0 is creating around community – as I learned in the patient portal work I have done, these online connections can actually strengthen rather than weaken the offline ones.

You can see the rest of Dentyne’s innovative campaign on their site – they missed one crucial detail in their appeal to the Web 2.0 generation, though, by not making this content embeddable, which should be the case for a campaign like this. From my own experience, I know that big companies are often not of one personality, so there can be some disconnects as large organizations move into the future. In the meantime, enjoy the images.

Photo Friday: Extroverted East Coast

August 1st, 2008 | Popularity: 20%
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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)

(I think your generation is) a polarizing figure.

June 17th, 2008 | Popularity: 18%
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  • I’m a polarizing figure. – Jay Parkinson brings up and idea that I’ve been discussing a bit – there is a generational philosophy shift happening as boomers turn the reins over to GenX and GenY. Tension may be created as a result, but in my glass 3/4 full way, I think GenX and GenY, in the way they are less tolerant of customs with limited value (in a good way, according to Jack Welch), are awakening the interests that the boomer generation has always had and can now seize upon.

Giving a great presentation from Al Gore; Genie Industries LEAN approach; Wisdom of Patients Paper

May 7th, 2008 | Popularity: 55%
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The Genie Industries video is especially compelling because everything they discuss is applicable in health care. What if we substituted “patient care” for making scissor lifts – we would see huge strides in improvement. Also, just upgraded the software that powers this blog. Viva open source.

GenY Physicians in WSJ; Nice overviews of chronic illness burden; Twitter apps, Health2.0 Definitions

May 6th, 2008 | Popularity: 25%
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April 29th through May 4th:

Learning More About the Medical Home and Finding Innovation Where It Lives

April 16th, 2008 | Popularity: 55%
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If you are interested in innovation, I think this is a good podcast worth listening to – and the actual audio is more useful than the printed version.

I listened to it the day before I attended the latest Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative, in Washington, DC. At the meeting, I was fortunate to run into one of my role models, Susan Edgman-Levitan, PA, and we talked about the idea that the Medical Home is about improving the care of patients where they spend most of their time – where they live, work, and play. We can help patient-centered care flourish by including ideas from everyone involved in the care, including nurses, doctors, allied health practitioners, eye care, oral health care, behavioral health care, just to name a few.

I liked what Jack said in the podcast, that in a company, there has to be

a sense that in every soul of the company, the idea that everybody innovates.

Toward the end of the podcast, Jack gets quite fired up about the idea that innovation can’t be regulated to the chosen few. My experience reinforces this. In the area of health information technology, this is critical. When most people think about implementing HIT, they think about the implementation period. The most powerful part of HIT is what happens after implementation, and using a management system like the one developed by Toyota Motor Company (as we are) can allow an organization to turn HIT into an organization wide innovation engine – if they capture all of the ideas of everyone involved in providing care and put them to use. To not do so is to waste one of the most valuable raw materials for growth – ideas and time (and most importantly our patients’ time).

One other conversation that has come up in the last several days is about generational changes in approach. Many of the Generation X and Generation Y colleagues I have been talking with were raised in a professional environment where we were not going to have all the answers, and we are uncomfortable being accountable for them. We want to share the power of coming up with the answers with our provider colleagues and our patients. This is not to say that our baby boomer colleagues don’t have this desire, too. I think we are stimulating each other to do what they’ve always wanted to do, and involving patients, their families, and all practitioners, all specialties and roles, is really going to make a person’s medical home special.

Feel free to take a listen and let me know what you think:

Finding Innovation Where It Lives

Photo: Bear Added Riches in Trust for Mankind

April 12th, 2008 | Popularity: 48%
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I walked past this sign, welcoming people to Pomona College, in Claremont, California. As our profession thinks about broadening consumer health informatics to help more people (from diverse backgrounds and parts of our society), we should remember to share the added riches of our learning, experience, and ideas for improving health care in trust for mankind. More innovation happens when more is shared, not less. This includes what we did well with, and what mistakes we made.

Pomona College Pomona College Pomona College

What’s a Leader vs. a Manager?; GenY is Hard Working; New York PCIP Doing Well

April 11th, 2008 | Popularity: 83%
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April 5th through April 8th:

Photo Friday: Discrete Call, A Metaphor for Information Technology and Health IT

April 4th, 2008 | Popularity: 25%
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This week’s photo was taken by DC Photographer MV Jantzen. It is a beautiful illustration of the challenge of the use of information technology in health care and in the workplace in general. It was taken during a Revolutionary War re-enactment here in the mid-Atlantic area.

For patients, it is a metaphor for the ways we ask them to be (or not be) involved in their care by restricting their access to 19th century technologies.

For health care providers and all employees, it is a metaphor for the restrictions we place on them when they leave the consumer IT sphere and enter the workplace IT sphere.

In most parts of health care, we are regularly asking patients, nurses, and doctors to forgo 21st century tools in favor of Revolutionary War gear.

Some companies, including British Petroleum, are exploring ways to support employees in leveraging all of the best tools to serve customers
. We should all come to work prepared to leverage the best tools available, and have fun doing it, without checking our 21st century clothes at the door.

Physicans and Blogs; Explaining the RUC; Nice Use of Second Life

March 22nd, 2008 | Popularity: 39%
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March 18th through March 19th:

  • The ‘World Wide Computer’?Another HAL? – Businessweek’s Review of “The Big Switch” – I used it for comparison
  • NPR: Doctor Blogs Raise Concerns About Patient Privacy – I agree with points raised – a patient should never seek care and then discover that they have been written about on a blog. Instead, they should receive a copy of the medical record that has been created about them. At the same time, physician bloggers are doing something very important – they are testing the boundaries of transparency, to support a more accountable health care system. If anyone saw the 60 minutes story about Dennis Quaid and his family, the rationale for this become very clear.
  • What Every Physician Should Know About the RUC – January 2008 – Family Practice Management – The information is useful. As primary care providers I think we need to be careful to include our specialty colleagues in the conversation, not distance themselves from it. As a member of a large multispecialty medical group, I know that there is interest across the physician community in supporting community health and the best experience for patients.
  • MindBlizzard blog: Virtual Healthcare 2: Palomar Pomerado Health – All right – More news about the utility of Second Life – testing a hospital before it launches
  • What is the ROI on employee suggestion systems? – A nice example from the toothpaste industry. But not necessarily one that supports the evidence, that far less toothpaste than people think is needed to protect teeth…..Maybe a customer suggestion system might be in order.

Now Reading: The Big Switch, by Nicholas Carr

March 18th, 2008 | Popularity: 27%
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This book was recommended to me by another Health Information Technology professional, and I really got a lot out of … the first half of it. I was so on the fence about what I thought about it as a whole that I looked up both the review of the book on BusinessWeek.com, and I read Nicholas Carr’s article “IT Doesn’t Matter,” from the Harvard Business Review to check on my thinking.

I’ll start with the first half, which was very engaging and engrossing, comparing the rise of the electrical industry to the commoditization of information technology. I have read about the electrical industry before, but not so well laid out. There are many parallels worthy of drawing, such as the way our culture was deliberately and unintentionally changed as a result of electrification. Fascinating, especially around the way that managing a household changed – the same number of hours doing house work, just higher expectations and more technical skill required. This is where the HBR article also helped a little bit, because the concepts are important for health information technology. In the article, he says

In the earliest phases of its buildout, however, an infrastructural technology can take the form of a proprietary technology. As long as access to the technology is restricted – through physical limitations, intellectual property rights, high costs, or a lack of standards – a company can use it to gain advantages over rivals.

That sort of sums up the state of Health Information Technology, and a nice analysis done of this recently also alluded to the idea that there’s an inertia present among vendors that’s keeping HIT in this phase.

That’s unfortunate.

That HIT though. What about the rest of IT within a health care company – the storage servers, the document creators, e-mail, etc. He says

In the long run, the IT department is unlikely to survive, at least not in its familiar form. It will have little left to do once the bulk of business computing shifts out of private data centers and into “the cloud.”

The HBR article helps here as well, where he says that the IT buildout in most companies is complete, and “Commodities can be essential to business without being essential to strategy.”

The second half of the book is about the “World Wide Computer” and the implications that it has for privacy and the general threatening of industries as we know them today. I think the data about the publishing industry is compelling and of note – 13 percent, or 150,000 jobs lost since 2001. This potentially awaits any industry that is disintermediated.

I thought, though, that this section was written for a different generation of reader, though, one who has not grown up with computers. It’s a nice overview and a lot of the truths make sense, but they didn’t seem like revelations to me in my GenX state. I was really hoping for more detail on how the new IT department would be like and how companies were moving to things like employee asset management and software as a service.

So, maybe worthy of a read, at least the first half, from your local library or book rental service (more on this in a future post).

There are some provocative ideas and I would be interested in learning about companies that are moving to software as services across the enterprise, so reduce the waste of excess storage and maintenance of data centers. If anyone knows of companies doing this, let me know either in the comments or by contacting me directly.

Getting out of IT prision through employee asset management; DC still growing up

March 15th, 2008 | Popularity: 64%
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March 12th through March 13th:

“I can ride a horse in here (Second Life)” – Great Patient Voice videos from Health 2.0

March 13th, 2008 | Popularity: 22%
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Scribemedia and the organizers of the Health 2.0 Conference have put the videos that they showed from the conference online. They’re terrific.

My favorites : A patient with reflex sympathetic dystrophy:, A patient with multiple sclerosis who can dance every night in Second Life

I think they’re moving from a patient, provider, and health system leader perspective. I especially enjoyed the one about chronic pain. We are taught in residency to support patients with pain by encouraging them to document their symptoms over time. Then we don’t give them tools to do it. Then we wonder why they didn’t document their symptoms. Then we ask them to document their symptoms. In the video I got the sense that bearing witness to one’s own symptoms is therapeutic in and of itself. Would I want this information brought into a consultation with a patient? Is it more important than asking if prescribed drugs were effective? Absolutely. See what you think.

Video will help the patient and consumer voice be heard in ways not thought possible before. Better health care will result.

Steve Jobs and Leadership Philosophy; Health Plans and AMA less EHR supportive?; Two Health2.0 Services

March 10th, 2008 | Popularity: 63%
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March 4th through March 6th:

What about Carol.com; Top HIT Predictions and more Questions about the Federal Role

February 4th, 2008 | Popularity: 56%
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Possible Web2 apps for the Enterprise; Regence Health Plan lets its members provide feedback to others; Being my own CIO – update

January 16th, 2008 | Popularity: 33%
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This is my iPhone 1.1.3 edition blog post. The upgrade went flawlessly. I think this is a good time to reflect on how things are going in terms of being my own CIO. Green light here. I think technology is lightweight and standards based enough that it is enjoyable to e-mail, calendar, and content manage with a few simple tools that sync well with each other, in fixed locations and on the go. The software lineup I mentioned in my first post has not changed – it has only gotten better. Data detectors in Leopard work amazingly well and are a huge time saver. I recalled about 2 years ago that I could look down at my Macintosh dock and find all 4 Microsoft Office apps running on it. Since this experience, there usually aren’t any, as they have been handily replaced by Mail, Pages, Numbers, and Keynote. This is not to say that I have a goal of replacing Microsoft apps on my desktop. I am really looking forward to purchasing Office 2008 and seeing what it has to offer. The Macintosh Business Unit there always does a great job with their products and are a good example of the benefit of having an in house innovation unit.

All of that aside, the next question for me has to be – how to get this lightweight technology into the enterprise, because this is what people are learning outside of work. Why not make it what they use at work? What is the cost of acquiring and supporting the monolithic suite of applications that most enterprises use? This is especially relevant for the next generation of leaders and staff (GenX and Y). Are there examples of CIO’s out there who are pioneering in this regard. Worthy of exploration…

Links for January 14-15:

Spirit of Innovation, as told by Apple, Inc.

January 14th, 2008 | Popularity: 22%
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I love this new ad, because it’s a bit of a metaphor for generational change and innovation within organizations. Sometimes it feels that innovators are moving at 10 times the pace of the normal beat of things. The joy of creating change is to present the face that is going at the same beat or just slightly faster, so others can join in.

Also, on the eve of MacWorld, I dug out one of my favorite quotes, from 2006:

“We have a lot of health-care customers and maybe 1 percent of a company’s research department is on Macs but they have 99 percent of the influence.” – Jim Murphy, practice manager for Strategic Computer Solutions, a Syracuse, N.Y.-based IBM partner.

Original source for the ad can be found here.

HIT Resources; Blogging about “breaking up” with your company; Dr. Phil (Marshall) joins the blogosphere

January 7th, 2008 | Popularity: 28%
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94 Day DCVersary; I Miss the Library

January 3rd, 2008 | Popularity: 13%
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Only 4 days late this time. The 120 day update should be on time. New Year’s got in the way.

Still a green light on the entire experience. One way I can tell this is from the handy Macintosh calendar widget that I use to keep track of events coming up. Since I came here, I haven’t updated it to anything coming up – it is just tracking days since I arrived.

There’s an incredible amount of history and change here happening at the same time. Many of the streets I walk on regularly did not used to be walkable in a safe manner just 5-10 years ago (I remember), and a few of the streets I walk on are getting to that point. I have been a little light on attendance at some of our nation’s treasures, instead preferring to discover the treasures in the immediate radius of the community I reside in.

An excellent report came out last week from the Pew Internet & American Life Project about information seeking and library use. There’s data that library use is alive and well, and more prevalent among Generation Y. This tracks my own experience, in that I discovered the library about 3 years ago and have been hooked ever since. Unfortunately, it appears that the District library system is not as well funded as the Seattle Public Library is, which is a shame. I fear that I may have to go back to buying books. I worry more about people who cannot just buy books. I think there’s a great case for continued, generous, funding for libraries everywhere. They are an information system for health care, and life in general. One thing I would like to explore while I am here is supporting the District Library. If anyone has any ideas, feel free to add your comments to this post.

Edelman Trust Barometer; A GenY-friendly Employer; Mike Leavitt’s Blog discussion on the SGR

December 21st, 2007 | Popularity: 54%
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December 16th through December 18th:

Baby Boomers and retirement; Case for Informed Optimism

December 3rd, 2007 | Popularity: 25%
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November 27th through December 2nd:

Facts are what you see on the ground; Being in your 20’s in the 2000’s; RHIO closure

November 15th, 2007 | Popularity: 37%
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New Microsoft Workspaces; Dedicating Cancer Treatments; More GenY from 60 Minutes

November 13th, 2007 | Popularity: 42%
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