Posts Tagged ‘iftf’

Now Reading: From Caregiving to Caring: A New Approach to Civic Engagement

December 7th, 2009 | Popularity: 4%
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From our friends at the Institute for the Future, a kind of storybook report of an “emergent-reality” game they ran with United Cerebral Palsy on the subject of caregiving and caring in the future. If you’ve been following my delicious feed, you’ll see that I’ve been doing some reading about the concept of “aging in place” (or “aging independently” as tagged).

Why? What does caregiving and aging in place have to do with health informatics and patient empowerment (and Washington, DC, and diversity, my other two favorite things, for that matter).

Of course it has a lot to do with all of those things. The senior population is set to double by 2030, the overwhelming majority of them are going to live in conventional housing, they will have less kids, greater education, and potentially greater wealth than their predecessors (but with increasing disparities in this area). As it says in the introduction:

the challenges of caregiving become inextricable from the challenges facing health care systems, civic engagement, and declining cities.

I have been asking myself if the phenomenon of aging-in-place is an invention of various industries; I don’t think it is, right now (but please challenge me on that point). Various interactions in the last 6 months, from meeting Marty Cooper and Arlene Harris in the summer, to interacting with the Innovation Learning Network keeps bringing these themes up.

The report itself summarizes several technologically-powered (or empowered) approaches to supporting caregiving in the 21st Century, including basics on remote sensing, non-cash incentives (time-banks, for example), and transparent reporting and reputation systems.

I also like the way this data was put together, it seems very California Healthcare Foundation -esque with the signature of IFTF, both great things when it comes thinking of the future. See what you think.


Photo Friday: Check the Accuracy of Your Message – Have it Drawn For You

June 19th, 2009 | Popularity: 11%
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KP Panel IFTF Health Horizons

IFTF Health Horizons

While speaking at the Institute for the Future’s Health Horizons’ Spring 2009 Conference (LiveTweets here and more organized here) about Combinatorial Innovation, with William Ruh, Vice President, Cisco Systems, Larry Tessler, from 23andMe, and Mike Liebhold, Senior Researcher from IFTF, I had a great opportunity to have my words documented graphically, by a very talented visual recording artist.

You could look at the product and get a sense of what I was speaking about on behalf of Kaiser Permanente – member/patient as the hub of health care, engaged doctors with their patients, moving ahead together in the interest of those they serve.

Seeing the documentation is also a great check on accuracy – and in fact, it showed an error in my discussion – the “$5 billion Project” attributed to Kaiser Permanente HealthConnect is actually $4.2 billion, which is a big difference in discussing the investment of a non-profit health system in leading edge technology.

I think (and thought) this was a great opportunity. How can a person tell what the audience feels after they tell a story about something like patient empowerment using technology? Extrapolating to the patient-physician encounter, how does a patient know if their physician understood the significance of their story? Seeing the documentation is very powerful, and a visual check on creating the right impression of the work is very innovative, in my opinion.

Thanks a ton to Institute for the Future for hosting a great discussion, and for allowing me to touch base again wtih two of my favorite leaders in the universe, Karl Hoover and Diana Elser, both from Group Health Cooperative, and as of the date of this discussion, now on Twitter (Follow them here: @kmhoover @dlelser and please encourage them to share their experience in this medium…) Welcome aboard!