Posts Tagged ‘mayo’

Presentation: Telling our Story: Using Web2.0 Tools to Maximize Health

October 8th, 2009 | Popularity: 3%
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It has been a busy week to say the least. One of the highlights, though, was giving this presentation with Holly Potter, Vice President of Public Relations and Stakeholder Management for Kaiser Permanente, at the Health Care Public Relations, Marketing & Internal Communications: A Social Media Summit, put on by Ragan Communications.

We talked about how we met, through similar communication-type experiences, and the work we are doing now, including promoting an internal social network at Kaiser Permanente, and promoting participation of physicians and staff online with members and potential members.

It’s been really great to work with Holly and her team, who are coaching us to participate, rather than to not participate, and who we can turn to when we want to know just how high the expectations our communities of us are. The expectations are pretty high, and they’re willing to help us meet them.

See what you think and enjoy.

Lessons Learned From the Mayo Clinic – ABC News

August 14th, 2009 | Popularity: 5%
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  • Lessons Learned From the Mayo Clinic – ABC News – Mayo clinic, excellent at all levels of care, understands the benefit of good primary care, as this video explains. Thanks to Paul Grundy for the tip, and his ongoing championship of primary care!

Now Reading: Articles challenging “Do happy employees = happy customers?”

May 11th, 2009 | Popularity: 20%
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I used to spend a lot of time struggling with this question, and I see many people still struggling with it, especially in Health Information Technology. I see a focus in a lot of places on making sure physicians are happy in order to be successful. The struggle is normal, this is a controversial idea. This article from HBR says that it’s the E=MC2 of customer loyalty.  

I’m not sure I agree, though.

I last did some deep-dive business study research on this a few years ago and came to the conclusion that patient happiness and doctor happiness are probably co-mingled. My work experience in several places has always worried me that excessive focus on the happiness of one population (doctors, nurses, allied health, anyone) puts patient happiness at risk, so why not just focus on their satisfaction as the key to everyone else’s?

In the article Employee Happiness Isn’t Enough to Satisfy Customers , the authors state:

The idea that employee satisfaction simply rubs off and benefits the company is wishful thinking.

And then go on to state that there’s no evidence that satisfied employees equal satisfied customers.

In the feature article, What Only the CEO Can Do, A.G. Lafley, chairman and chief executive officer of Proctor & Gamble notes throughout his interest in customer satisfaction first, in crafting the role of the CEO (much of it based on Peter Drucker’s philosophy)

Drucker also wrote that the purpose of a business is to create a customer. P&G’s purpose is to touch and improve more consumers’ lives with more P&G brands and products every day. Of all our stakeholders, both outside and inside, the primary one is the consumer.

And

As for employee stakeholders, we believe that P&G people are the company’s most valuable assets. Without them we would have no P&G brands, no P&G innovation, and no P&G partnerships. However, putting employees ahead of external stakeholders, especially consumers, would result in a more internal—and, arguably, more short-term—focus. P&G people are inspired by the company’s purpose and motivated by how they can personally touch and improve consumers’ lives.

In the article, Lafley talks about how the CEO shapes values and standards, and how in his role, he shifted the values more toward placing the customer’s needs first, as he felt that values prior to his tenure had evolved to place employees’ needs ahead of consumers. It’s an interesting read throughout to discover how the metrics of P&G are based on customer loyalty and penetration of P&G satisfaction into consumers’ homes.

I like articles like this because they connect the philosophies of some of our best health care organizations, like Mayo Clinic, where it is said,”The best interest of the patient is the only interest to be considered.”

I connect all of this to working with physicians through the understanding that physicians are passionate about helping patients succeed and often put this success ahead of their own emotional success, because they will do whatever it takes, however inefficiently or indirectly they must do it in the systems they work in.

If I/we can allow them to fulfill their passion, to support patients where they live, work, and play, in being successful, as efficiently and directly as possible, their emotional success will ensue, or as it said the Employee Happiness article,

…engage employees by giving them both reasons and ways to please customers; then acknowledge and reward appropriate behavior.

So I know this is a controversial idea, and my research may not be as deep as anyone reading this post – I welcome your comments.


Social Technologies in Health Care – Part IV | SMUG – Social Media University, Global

April 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 11%
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Now Reading: Delivery System Reform: Action Steps and Pay-Per-Value Approaches

December 8th, 2008 | Popularity: 25%
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This is a white paper published on the Mayo Clinic Health Policy blog about approaches to delivery system reform, with a significant focus on reimbursement. I read it because I’m joining colleagues from Kaiser Permanente at the World Healthcare Innovation and Technology Congress (and if you’d like, you can hear a podcast of CEO George Halvosron here).

The reason I decided to post this paper on my blog is I think it’s an accessible (easy to read), basic and reasoned approach to changing the way we deliver care in our patients’ interest. It goes beyond medical home thinking (while including those principles) to include more aspects of care, including inpatient and outpatient care, and includes what I think is a pretty reasonable timeline for this happening.

There is a section on “Patient-Centered Use of Information Technology” that says information must be made available to “doctors and patients.” I think the people who read this blog and others can further flesh out the details of a fully accountable health care system. I also really liked the discussion of “Episode-Based Payments for Hospitalized Patients.” I think this would enhance care coordination, and I have seen the impact of hospital care reimbursement being isolated from the overall hospital care episode, which doesn’t end when the patient leaves the hospital.

Some of the recommendations are to be expected considering the organizations who provided the perspective, such as support for group medical practice. At the same time, I think the paper has good relevance and offers realistic ideas for all care environments, which is why I’m posting it here. It’s pretty manageable lengthwise, so I’d encourage others to read it and post their thoughts on it – do the ideas look reasonable/rational in whatever care system you work in/ get care from?

Here’s the link to the post on the Mayo Clinic Health Policy blog if you’d like to post your comments there (and feel free to post there instead of here)

Reflecting on my physician blogging 2005-2008

April 30th, 2008 | Popularity: 35%
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I am in Oakland, California, today, participating in an discussion sponsored by Kaiser Permanente about Web 2.0 applications in health care. As part of the discussion I presented my story as a physician who wrote a blog internally for our medical group, and since October, 2007, on the public Internet (here).

From 2005-2007 I managed an internal blog that ended up having 748 posts total, so for 2 years, I posted something almost every business day, along with other physician informaticists on my team with me. That’s quite a commitment. This blog has 298 posts on it since October, 2007. I actually never thought I’d keep a blog, but I’m (a) glad I’m doing it and (b) glad I have a story to share about it as a Health Information Technology leader. I want people to know how I am serving them.

I also got to moderate/interact with two industry experts in the field, Tim Collins, SVP of Experiential Marketing for Wells Fargo Bank, and Lee Aase, Manager for Syndication and Social Media for the Mayo Clinic. It’s an honor to meet other industry leaders who are embracing this technology, and they are embracing it. I know this is the future (or the present…)

Given my experience, the idea of patients bringing their user generated content into the physician patient relationship really interests me. Could an electronic health record of the future subscribe to specially tagged RSS feeds from our patients? I don’t think physicians can or would be following 2,000 lives worth of lifestreams. However, if there’s something in a patient’s life that they want us to know about and can get it to us without double entry, I think that information would change the content of our relationship a lot. And in a good way.