Archive | General Thoughts RSS feed for this section

Will Recession Kill Landlines

Every year there are more and more people who only use mobile phones.  A few months ago, you started seeing Sprint advertisements talking about how much you could save on their plan that gives you unlimited calls for $99 / mo.  Now, this morning on CNN’s new money segment, the recommendation was to ditch your landline.  They suggested that you could save $400+ per year doing this and who wouldn’t want that in today’s economy.

I think this is a great example of how the recession could fundamentally change our world by accelerating certain trends.

Mean Or Nice: Which Is More Contageous?

I found this blog entry on Dr. Gupta’s blog very interesting. It talks about the fact that being mean is more likely to stick with someone and effect them than being nice. Isn’t that frustrating? Wouldn’t we all like to believe that we could make things better by being nice when all it takes is a few rude people to change that.

That’s because, it seems being inconsiderate and rude to people has a much bigger impact than being nice. A recent study, conducted at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, found feeling slighted can have a bigger impact on how a person treats another, than being the recipient of someone’s generosity.

Working with college students who were tasked with exchanging money in an orchestrated test of taking and sharing, researchers found the young people were willing to share at beginning of the study. But when they felt they were being taken advantage of, or that their fellow students were cheating them, they became more aggressive and greedier, rather than stepping back and appreciating what they were given.

Psychologists say this is not unusual. The meaner deed has the greater impact. Give something to someone and they may appreciate it. Take it away and they’ll fight you or at least object strongly.

As the doctor says “All this anger and hostility not only leads to unhappy people, but can cause anxiety, which raises our blood pressure, and puts stress on our hearts.”

Need A Brady Bunch Show About Health Plans

This is a thought that I have had multiple times. Think about what The Brady Bunch did for architecture. Subconsciously or consciously, I believe it created a positive impression about architecture in the minds of millions of people growing up. I don’t think this was something that architectural associations thought up, but it would have been a good idea.

So, why doesn’t AHIP, the organization that represents the health insurance plans, come up with a way to fund or collaborate with hollywood to create a web story, a sitcom, or a movie in which the hero is an executive at a health plan. By day they are running the company and by night they are moonlighting at a free clinic helping improve health.

Maybe I am crazy, but I really believe this positive imagery would help the industry. In it’s place, the only thing we have are negative images from the movie Sicko or from stories about people being denied care or from our first hand experience with our benefit costs going up. This may not matter as the health industry changes, but I think it will be a long-time before we every really move to a single-payor system or something that radically eliminates the current structure.

Uproar Over “Reference-Based” Medicare Pricing – Please

Here is an overview of the issue on the WSJ Health Blog.

First off, I am not sure I would call it reference based pricing when the rest of the world calls it mandatory generics.  In many states, this is even a requirement where the pharmacy has to fill a multi-source brand (MSB) with the generic equivalent of the drug.

[In English, what this means is that once a brand drug has lost it’s patent and the drug is available as a generic then the generic (which is typically much lower cost) has to be dispensed.]

So, the issue is that apparently Medicare plans don’t always point out that if members choose the higher cost brand product (Prozac versus fluoxetine) that they will pay more..and often a lot more.  Brand manufacturers raise their prices on the brands after they lose patent since they know there are people out there who really want to purple pill and not the generic white pill (for example).

I don’t know if Medicare plans allow it, but I know a lot of clients who allowed members to get the brand name drug at their copay (not at the drug cost) if the physician wrote the prescription for DAW (dispense as written).  The problem is the physician might simply do this at the member’s request even if they don’t need it.  From everything I have ever seen, it should be less than 1% of members who really need the brand versus the A-B equivalent generic.  (Look here for the FDA information on generics.)

I don’t disagree that for the 1% that have an allergic reaction to the inactive ingredients (e.g., blue dye #17) that there should be an exception process BUT we can’t build for the exception and manage costs.  Too many people will choose the easy path and drive costs up significantly.

A Few Examples Of Technology Going Mainstream

Two things caught my attention this week on how technology (especially social networking) is making its way into the mainstream.

In today’s USA Today, they compare this year’s Heisman winner (Sam Bradford) with last year’s winner (Tim Tebow).  As it runs through their statistics – age, year, records, first place votes, one jumped out at me – Facebook friends.  They actually compared how many friends the two quarterbacks had in Facebook.  Really…how does that matter?

A few days ago, Michigan’s GOP Chairman Saul Anuzis announced his interest in leading the Republican Party via Twitter.  Who was subscribed to his Twitter feed would be my question?

“It would be suicide for the Republican Party and conservatives to not aggressively embrace technology,” said Matt Lewis, a writer for the conservative Web site Townhall.com. “The world is dramatically changing in the way people get their information and the way they communicate — the party needs to change with it.”

Both examples make the point that these technologies are here to stay and are revoluntionizing the way we think about communications, marketing, personal branding, etc.  Where is healthcare?  When is the last time you saw the CEO of a major insurance plan providing his Twitter feed to the members?  In most cases, you can’t even find contact information for a lot of companies anymore.

Happy Thanksgiving! Enjoy The Turducken

I must admit that one of the foods I have been fascinated with (but have never eaten) is the Turducken.  It is a turkey stuffed with a duck stuffed with a chicken stuffed with stuffing or sausage.  Regardless of what you eat tomorrow, enjoy the day.

If you’re healthy, reflect on how lucky you are since more than 50% of the US population is on some chronic medication.

If you’re sick, reflect on how lucky you are that there are researchers and companies trying to find cures for your disease. 

If you’re frustrated by the costs of the US healthcare system, focus on the positive which is the access we have compared to many other people around the world. 

If you work in healthcare, reflect on how lucky you are to be in a stable part of the US economy. 

Enjoy your family and the day!

Tough Times To Start A Company

After trying my own venture a few years ago, I have greater empathy for this challenge. I have watched a few friends and neighbors doing this. I have the ultimate respect for them.

Even so, most business experts conform to a theory of “thirds”: Of all the new business startups, 1/3 eventually turn a profit, 1/3 break even, and 1/3 never leave a negative earnings scenario. According to a study by the U.S. Small Business Association, only 2/3 of all small business startups survive the first two years and less than half make it to four years.  (source)

A few comments I have heard from friends:

  • A physician who wanted to go out on his own to open his practice (a time honored tradition) could not get a loan and even putting up his house didn’t work since the house was worth less than he owed.
  • A friend who does small business loans told me that the criteria to approve loans made it difficult for her to give small companies money.
  • I talked to a VC on my plane this morning who said they can’t raise funds in this economy and that valuations are down since there is less money chasing deals.

Then in USA Today, they had an article about venture capitalists losing their nerve.

  • US venture capital for the 3rd quarter dropped to $7.4B (down 7% from last year).
  • There were only 270 information technology deals done in the 3rd quarter which is the lowest quarterly amount since 1st quarter of 1996.
  • The Silicon Valley venture capitalist confidence index hit 2.9 (lowest in 5-year history of the index).
  • Tesla Motors, Redfin, Zillow, and AdBrite (promising start-ups) have all announced layoffs.
  • People are looking to sell their holdings in venture funds to companies like Industry Ventures that buys holdings at a discount.
  • The exceptions are biotech and clean tech which continue to grow funds.

Win Detergent – For Athletes

Not really a product promotion, but I have been so impressed that I thought I would post a more light-hearted entry.  I just started using this Win Detergent for my running clothes.  Much better.  For those of you that are athletes and have trouble getting that sweat smell out of your workout clothes.  Give this a try.  (I get it at the local Dicks Sporting Goods.)

Which Bathroom To Use?

I finally found a few minutes to post.  It has been a good, busy week.

On the radio this morning, they were having a debate about what a man should do when taking their young daughter to the bathroom.  I didn’t even realize it was an option.  Unisex bathrooms are an obvious solution, but what about when you only have a men’s room and a women’s room.  Don’t you just go to the men’s room?

Apparently, some people don’t.  Several women called in and said they would rather their husbands take their girls into the women’s room.  More sanitary.  No potential exposure issues (i.e., urinals).  And, several men said that they do it by simply knocking and announcing that a man is coming in with his daughter.

I couldn’t help but comment.  I have always taken my daughter to the men’s room with no incidents that I know of although a few times when it was dirty and we went somewhere else.

Love What You Do

We had an annual company event today, and I must admit that all day long I kept thinking about when can I get back to my hotel to work on several ideas that I have and get a couple of deliverables out the door.  Not that I wasn’t having fun since it was one of the best company events I have been to.  But, I love what I do.  And, since I have had the chance to work several places and even more as a consultant, I think being happy at work and enjoying your corporate culture is very important.

I love that fact that the company takes the time to celebrate and discuss the future.  And, it is great to be at a company that is still of a size that everyone can interact with each other, but big enough that you can make investments in the future.  Anyways, working on a few things for some of you clients and enjoying every minute of it.

But making it relevant for the rest of you…it made me think of the correlation between job satisfaction and health.  We all know the problems with stress and the impacts on health, but I found what looks like a good meta-study that shows the correlations.  Here is the abstract fromOccupational and Environmental Medicine 2005;62:105-112.

The relationship between job satisfaction and health: a meta-analysis

E B Faragher, M Cass, C L Cooper

Background: A vast number of published studies have suggested a link between job satisfaction levels and health. The sizes of the relationships reported vary widely. Narrative overviews of this relationship have been published, but no systematic meta-analysis review has been conducted.

Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis of 485 studies with a combined sample size of 267 995 individuals was conducted, evaluating the research evidence linking self-report measures of job satisfaction to measures of physical and mental wellbeing.

Results: The overall correlation combined across all health measures was r = 0.312 (0.370 after Schmidt-Hunter adjustment). Job satisfaction was most strongly associated with mental/psychological problems; strongest relationships were found for burnout (corrected r = 0.478), self-esteem(r = 0.429), depression (r = 0.428), and anxiety(r = 0.420). The correlation with subjective physical illness was more modest (r = 0.287).

Conclusions: Correlations in excess of 0.3 are rare in this context. The relationships found suggest that job satisfaction level is an important factor influencing the health of workers. Organisations should include the development of stress management policies to identify and eradicate work practices that cause most job dissatisfaction as part of any exercise aimed at improving employee health. Occupational health clinicians should consider counselling employees diagnosed as having psychological problems to critically evaluate their work—and help them to explore ways of gaining greater satisfaction from this important aspect of their life.

College Grads On Work Hours

As you can tell, I have been slow on the posts lately…too much work. Today (for example), I have a breakfast meeting in Boston, an afternoon meeting in Minneapolis, and then fly to Phoenix for a morning meeting on Wednesday. Crazy day.

But, all this made the USA Today Snapshot in Section B catch my eye. It was an Accenture College Senior survey about how many hours they expect to work in their first job (post graduation). What would you guess? I would have said 50-60 hours especially when you’re in your initial job and proving yourself.

I at least find this surprising. What are the 5% doing that work less than 30 hours per week? And the 41% that think they are working between 31-40 hours per week. These are college graduates most of which I would think are taking salaried jobs.

Blogger’s Block

I never really knew what it was like to have writer’s block.  I didn’t have pressure to write or some big manuscript.  I occasionally suffer from block in being creative, but that is usually worked through by focusing on something else or going for a good run.

This week has been so busy with several big meetings that it has been hard to free up my mind to write.  I have posted a few basic posts, but nothing significantly thought provoking.  I often get asked about blogging and how I manage to come up with content every day.  Usually, it is so easy since I am watching TV, reading the news, and reviewing news clippings.  I don’t think I have done any of the three all week.

Here’s to clearing my mind and trying to share some thoughts.

Developing Policy Through Social Networking Tools

I was looking for something else early this morning and was surprised to see that Senator McCain (or someone on his staff) had posted the following question on LinkedIn.  So far, there are well over 2,000 answers.  I think this is a healthy use of a tool like this to get feedback.

What is the biggest challenge our country faces?

Our country is faced with challenges as we enter into the 21st century. I am prepared to effectively deal with these challenges and lead our country as President on Day 1. Please let me know what you view as the biggest challenge America faces and how you would like your President to address this challenge.

My response was that there wasn’t one, but three:

  • How to reskill the country to continue to be competitive without impacting a generation?
  • How to create a universal healthcare system while rewarding the entrepreneurial and capitalist beliefs of the country?
  • How to contribute to the global economy and political stability without missing opportunities within the country for development?

Medco on Future of Pharmacy

Medco has introduced a new publication called Perspectives. The one I just read was by Dr. Robert Epstein who is their Chief Medical Officer and is about how pharmacy will become personalized, specialized, and consumer driven. It is a well written piece with some good and interesting facts. Here are a facts and takeaways:

  • “Over the past five years we’ve seen a 60 percent increase in adult ailments diagnosed in children and treated with adult medicines.”
  • “The use of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), drugs for heartburn and acid-reflux disease, increased by 60 percent in children between the ages of 1 and 4. This is despite studies revealing that as many as 95 percent of young children who present with symptoms of reflux self-correct for the condition in 12 to 16 months. Furthermore, some recent research suggests the long-term use of these products – particularly in the early years of life – can lead to infections, pneumonia or gastroenteritis.”
  • “Blockbuster medicines in three new major therapeutic categories – Fosamax® for osteoporosis, Risperdal®, an antipsychotic, and Imitrex® for migraines – soon lose patent protection.” [He then suggests that payors begin to look at strategies for driving Fosamax and Imitrex marketshare now, especially for new patients, so that when they go generic they are positioned to take advantage of the savings.]
  • He talks about the changing guidelines for hypertension, asthma, and cholesterol and points out that “It’s estimated that 25 percent of Americans have hypertension, and another 25 percent have “pre-hypertension” – which means half of the U.S. population will become candidates for treatment.”
  • He talks about nano-technology and gives the following example:

“One company, based in Houston, has taken nano-sized particles of gold, which are injected into the bloodstream and leach from the leaky blood vessels associated with rapidly growing tumors. When exposed to infrared light – these gold particles literally absorb the heat and destroy the tumor. Called AuroLaseTM Therapy, within 10 days of a single treatment this therapy caused, laboratory rats with prostate cancer to attain a 90-percent survival rate.”

  • “More than one in five people placed on Coumadin® are hospitalized by side effects, many of which could be averted by genetic tests to more accurately guide proper dosing”

Pharmacists to Prescribe?

Someone asked me if I thought pharmacists would be allowed to prescribe medication to patients. I’m not familiar with any legislation on this topic (although there well might be some).

My opinion is that the better model is that physicians are responsible for diagnosing and basically writing a prescription for the type of drug (e.g., statin). I think the pharmacist is in the best position to talk with the patient about which drug within that category they should use looking at drug-drug interactions, form of the medication, formulary status, costs, side-effects, and other things that usually result in a follow-up call to the physician. Given that 40% of scripts written today hit some type of edit as an exception, I can’t imagine pushing that responsibility to the physician.

One of the most creative scripts I saw at Express Scripts around this was a physician that had just written all the PPIs (e.g., Prilosec, Nexium, Protonix) on the script and said pick one. I don’t know if it was legal, but I thought it made the point that they didn’t want the call back.

Communications As Trend Mgmt Tool for Pharmacy: Cliff Notes

Here are a few points from my recent webinar on this topic. If you are interested and a potential client, I would be happy to share the detailed content with you offline.

[Since all our competitors tried to sign up to listen in, I won’t give away everything here.]

  1. Talked about all the value sitting on the table that could be captured (>$30B per year).
  2. Talked about how communications can both be the trend management tool and enable utilization of other trend management tools (e.g., utilization management).
  3. Talked about things like loss aversion versus cost savings, the placebo / price correlation, and the transition from the Ford framework to the Starbucks framework in the healthcare industry.
  4. Talked about how people are different and the need for a systemic approach to dynamically optimizing program success using a scalable model.
  5. Talked about some frameworks for retail-to-mail and brand-to-generic along with the importance of asking the right questions in program design and measuring ROI.
  6. Finally, we talked about some results and the different levers to play with to impact results.

Real Life Biggest Loser

We all know that being in shape has lots of health benefits.  The issues of being overweight drive healthcare costs through the roof.  There is plenty of data out there about the obesity trends in the US.  The reality is that losing weight is hard.

The show The Biggest Loser does a great job of showing what exercise and diet can do.  The challenge of course is that most of us don’t live in a controlled environment with a personal trainer and 3 hours to workout per day.  So, a good friend of mine who has done it all on his own provides a great story.  He was just featured in our local paper here, but he has gone from 270 pounds to almost 200 pounds and from not exercising to running half-marathons.

In the end, it is basic…take in less calories than you burn per day.  Good luck.

From the World Health Organization (WHO):

Overweight and obesity lead to adverse metabolic effects on blood pressure, cholesterol, triglycerides and insulin resistance. Some confusion of the consequences of obesity arise because researchers have used different BMI cut-offs, and because the presence of many medical conditions involved in the development of obesity may confuse the effects of obesity itself.

The non-fatal, but debilitating health problems associated with obesity include respiratory difficulties, chronic musculoskeletal problems, skin problems and infertility. The more life-threatening problems fall into four main areas: CVD problems; conditions associated with insulin resistance such as type 2 diabetes; certain types of cancers, especially the hormonally related and large-bowel cancers; and gallbladder disease.

The likelihood of developing Type 2 diabetes and hypertension rises steeply with increasing body fatness. Confined to older adults for most of the 20th century, this disease now affects obese children even before puberty. Approximately 85% of people with diabetes are type 2, and of these, 90% are obese or overweight. And this is increasingly becoming a developing world problem. In 1995, the Emerging Market Economies had the highest number of diabetics. If current trends continue, India and the Middle Eastern crescent will have taken over by 2025.Large increases would also be observed in China, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the rest of Asia.

Raised BMI also increases the risks of cancer of the breast, colon, prostate, endometroium, kidney and gallbladder. Chronic overweight and obesity contribute significantly to osteoarthritis, a major cause of disability in adults. Although obesity should be considered a disease in its own right, it is also one of the key risk factors for other chronic diseases together with smoking, high blood pressure and high blood cholesterol. In the analyses carried out for World Health Report 2002, approximately 58% of diabetes and 21% of ischaemic heart disease and 8-42% of certain cancers globally were attributable to a BMI above 21 kg/m2.

Flooding

I am fortunate to live in high ground in Missouri, but this is definitely the closest the flooding has come.  As close as 2 miles away, my friends neighborhoods are almost inaccessible.  They had to have a fire department park in their neighborhood for a few days since once the water crested, there neighborhood would be unaccessible if there was a fire.  Very scary.

It reminds me of when I first moved to St. Louis in 1993 which was the worse flooding ever.  I have only begun to hear some concern for later in the spring when the record snowfalls up north begin to raise the water levels of the Mississippi.

Here is a few pictures from our local news site KSDK.

flooding1.jpgflooding2.jpgflooding3.jpg

3 Party Election

Not that this has anything to do with healthcare other than the fact that the outcome of the election will be important in setting the direction for the US healthcare system.

But, I can’t help but wonder why we wouldn’t finally see a legitimate 3rd party candidate this year.  If Obama and Clinton can’t have a clear winner, why wouldn’t someone like Ross Perot or even Romney step in and fund one of them so that they could finally get a legitimate opportunity to be vice-president.  [And, yes…I do realize that they are both republicans.]

Great Book – Microtrends

microtrends.jpgAt PBMI, one of the best speakers was Kinney Zalesne who with Mark Penn wrote the book Microtrends. I just finished reading the book – all 370+ pages. I found it to be one of the most engaging non-fiction books I have read in a long time…which says a lot. I have boxes and book shelves of books that I have bought, skimmed, and stopped reading. I get something out of them, but it is often not enough to continue reading the whole book.

I found Microtrends to be interesting both personally and professionally. Let me throw out a few of the things that I highlighted and noted during my reading along with some of the potential implications within healthcare.

Some of the topics they cover:

  • Love, Sex, and Relationships (Sex-Ratio Singles, Cougars, Office Romancers, Commuter Couples, Internet Marrieds)
  • Work Life (Working Retired, Extreme Commuters, Stay-at-Home Workers, Wordy Women, Ardent Amazons)
  • Race and Religion (Stained Glass Ceiling Breakers, Pro-Semites, Interracial Families, Protestant Hispanics, Moderate Muslims)
  • Health and Wellness (Sun-Haters, 30-winkers, Southpaws Unbound, DIY Doctors, Hard-of-Hearers)
  • Family Life (Old New Dads, Pet Parents, Pampering Parents, Late-Breaking Gays, Dutiful Sons)
  • Politics (Impressionable Elites, Swing Is Still King, Militant Illegals, Christian Zionists, Newly Released Ex-Cons)
  • Teens (The Mildly Disordered, Young Knitters, Black Teen Idols, High School Moguls, Aspiring Snipers)
  • Food, Drink, and Diet (Vegan Children, A Disporportionate Burden, Starving for Life, Caffeine Crazies)
  • Lifestyle (Long Attention Spanners, Neglected Dads, Native Language Speakers, Unisexuals)
  • Money and Class (Second-Home Buyers, Modern Mary Poppinses, Shy Millionaires, Burgeois and Bankrupt, Non-Profiteers)
  • Looks and Fashion (Uptown Tatooed, Snowed-Under Slobs, Surgery Lovers, Powerful Petites)
  • Technology (Social Geeks, New Luddites, Tech Fatales, Car-Buying Soccer Moms)
  • Leisure and Entertainment (Archery Moms?, XXX Men, Video Game Grown-ups, Neo-Classicals)
  • Education (Smart Child Left Behind, America’s Home Schooled, College Dropouts, Numbers Junkies)
  • International (Mini-Churched, International Home Buyers, LAT Couples, Mammonis, Eurostars, Vietnamese Entrepreneurs, French Teetotalers, Chinese Picassos, Russian Swings)

Second, the countertrends are very interesting. More caffeine and more water. Shorter attention with a rise in knitting. More technology and more people abandoning technology. Obesity and intentional starvation. More sun tan parlors and more people afraid of the sun.

“Microtrends is based on the idea that the most powerful forces in our society are the emerging, counterintuitive trends that are shaping tomorrow right before us.”

Sample facts:

  • Less than 25% of the households in the US are married-with-kids. 26% are households of one person.
  • At birth, there are 90,000 more boys born per year than girls. By age 18, it has switched to a 51% female mix. Exclude out the gay men and lesbian women, you get a straight sex ratio of 53 women to 47 men.
  • 3M American adults in a long-term relationship or married met online which is the same number that met in church.
  • There are already 5M people 65 or older in the workforce and that number is expected to grow.
    • According to an economist at the Urban Institute, “if everyone worked just one year beyond expected retirement, we’d completely offset the anticipated shortfall between benefits and taxes in the old age insurance portion of Social Security.”
  • 3% of workers work from home. The average commute is 25 minutes. 3.4M people commute at least 90 minutes each way to work.
    • Researchers at Georgia Tech found that “every thirty minutes spent driving increases your risk of becoming obese by 3 percent.”
  • In a Gallup poll in 2006, when people were asked about how they feel about religious groups, Jews rated the highest with a net positive of 54%. There are more Christian evangelicals in the US that support Israel than Jews.
  • 5.4% of marriages are interracial which led to the US Census allowing people to select multiple races in 2000.
  • There are 10M Protestant Hispanics in the US which is more than the number of Muslims or Presbyterians.
  • 81% of American Muslims support gun control (compared to barely half of Americans).
  • There are 3x as many tanning parlors in the US as Starbucks.
  • 1 in 10 children aged 12-18 uses a sunlamp and only 1 in 3 uses sunscreen. And, at least 25% of skin damage occurs before a person is 18 years old.
  • 16% of American adults sleep less than 6 hours a night. But, this causes injuries, accidents, and health problems. Lack of sleep triggers hormones that boost hunger and appetite.
    • She calculated out what I have argued for years that this creates an extra 8.2 years of life for someone who lives to 82.
  • DIY (Do-It-Yourself) Doctors is a whole new group of people that self-diagnose, self-medicate, and challenge their physicians.
  • OTC sales are now $15B per year.
  • In 1997, Americans spend more out-of-pocket on Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) that on hospitalizations.
  • 3 in 5 Americans worry about medication errors at the hospital.
  • Women make healthcare decisions in over 70% of households.
  • 81% of people would like to use e-mail with their doctors but only 8% say they do today. [If they were controlled and reimbursed for this without increasing risk, I think they would welcome it.]
  • 1 in 10 Americans have some hearing loss. Nine seconds into a rock concert, you experience hearing loss. [I have been to several concerts even in the front row so that seems like a problem.]
  • 1 in 18 births were to men over 50. [Changes your underwriting profile.]
  • 63% of American households have pets. And, the top 1% of pets live better than 99% of the world’s population.
    • Studies have show health benefits of pet ownership including lowering blood pressure, reducing stress, preventing heart disease, and warding off depression.
  • Only 15% of parents would take away their kids privileges if they found out their 15 year old was using illegal drugs. [And most of us think we are strict?]
  • Only 4% of people over age 65 live in nursing homes or assisted living arrangements.
  • 40% of the people providing unpaid care for infirm adults are men. [Counter this to the assumption that women make most healthcare decisions.]
  • 650,000 ex-cons enter society every year. [Have we increased their health literacy while in prison.]
  • Childhood autism has increased 9-fold since 1992.
  • The number of kids being treated with antipsychotic drugs shot up 138% between 1997 and 2000.
  • In 2005, the main medical manual on the mental health of infants added two new subsets of depression, five new subsets of anxiety disorders and six new subsets of feeding behavior disorders.
  • There are 20M knitters in the US and more than ½ of them are under 34 with almost 6M of them being under 18.
  • In 2000, over 8% of teens were making money on the Internet.
  • There are 1.5M kids (between 8-18) that are vegetarians. 3M more who pass up meat but each chicken or fish. And, 3M more that each just chicken. 11% of girls aged 13-15 don’t eat meat.
    • Vegetarian men have been shown to have a 37% lower risk of heart disease.
    • Vegetarians of both genders are ½ as likely to develop dementia.
  • There are 9M morbidly obese people in the US (100 pounds overweight). Women are 2x as likely as men to be morbidly obese, but 1 in 6 black women are morbidly obese.
  • There is a small group of people practicing Calorie Restriction diets (1,200 – 1,800 calories).
    • Scientists have found that this lowers blood pressure, LDL, clogging of arteries, and body temperature (which may slow aging).
  • 6 of 10 Americans drink coffee every day. And, Americans drink 23 gallons of bottled water per year and 52 gallons of carbonated soft drinks.
  • The average age of caffeine overdosers was 21 in a study done around the Chicago Poison Center.
    • Caffeine causes insomnia, anxiety, headaches, stomach problems, cardiac arrhythmias, and weight gain.

“It is almost as though marketers see today’s society as an Amazon tribe, where women make all the decisions and men just go along for the ride.”

  • There are 12M “linguistically isolated” households in the US (i.e., no one speaks English well). And, in 2/3rds of these households, the head of household was born in the US. [Is multi-lingual soon to be a requirement?]
  • 1 in 3 Americans age 25-29 have a tattoo. 13% of Americans aged 18-24 have a tattoo and a body piercing.

Sample Healthcare Questions:

  1. How do we respond to the change in the family – older dates, commuter couples?
  2. With people working longer, what does this mean for health benefits? Are your needs and expectations different at age 75?
  3. When people are doing things that influence their health – sun tanning, sleeping too little, drinking too much caffeine, will companies step in and try to control this? (I know one large company in the South that has decided they won’t serve any fried food in the cafeteria.)
  4. Why don’t we do things like encourage pet adoption to help people become healthier?
  5. What are the implications of vegan children and low calorie diets and should the industry embrace, reward, or monitor them?
  6. When people don’t want to indicate a gender, will healthcare forms have to offer a “neither” category?
  7. With so many people getting tatooes, how long until that is a covered benefit or where there is a negotiated discount like the gym.
  8. There are lots of messy people. How do you communicate with them knowing they will misplace many things?
  9. For the people that have tried the Internet and chosen not to use it again, do you risk offending them with your constant push to self-serve?
  10. If America wants numbers, should we communicate more details not less?
  11. Should we be tracking lots of other factors (diet, caffeine, commute) in our Personal Health Records?

istock_000005278005medium.jpgI could go on, but I don’t want to give it all away. It is worth reading. It really makes you realize the value of targeting and personalization within a HealthComm framework.

Traveling Fun – No ID

Of course, when I show up at the Boston airport yesterday for a quick day trip down south, I can’t find my license. I hate the fact that you have to take it out of your wallet at security and sometimes at the car rental place. It just increases the probability of losing it.

And, I couldn’t lose it when I had just one flight. I had to fly down south, then fly back to Boston, and then fly to St. Louis. Three “extra” security checks, and no ability to rent a car.

Fortunately, after two of the security checks, Avis called to say they found my license. (Now, I just have to get a plane to show up in Cincinnati to catch my connection.)

But, I did learn several things in the process.

  1. You could actually use a lack of ID to cut through security lines as discussed at the Four Hour Workweek Blog. It would definitely work if they check ID at the beginning of a long security line.
  2. You can fly with some alternative forms of ID (other than driver’s license and passport). They told me that if I had a photo ID (e.g., Sam’s card) with a voter registration card or some other government issued ID then I could get through without the added security.

Without ID, you get fully padded down and wanded. Then everything you have with you is tested for bomb materials and searched.

Non-PC: Is Recession Good For HealthCare?

I am sure this is not a politically correct topic to discuss, but the thought crossed my mind.  Since 75% of the US thinks we are in a recession, I think we can assume that people will act as if we are in a recession.  Never mind the economist definition of whether it’s a recession.

So, what are the implications for healthcare:

  • If I am cost conscious, I should be more willing to accept generics and mail. (pro)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may be more willing to go to a clinic versus a physician or urgent care.  (neutral)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may be more likely to skip doses or not refill my medications. (con)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may not join a gym but instead workout outside.  (neutral)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may not be preventative in my care.  (con)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may be more willing to accept free services offered through my employer or plan. (pro)
  • If I am cost conscious, I may take advantage of all the web tools and member portals which exists.  (pro)

In the big picture, there is a chance that a recession could push individual health insurance faster.  Just like Medicare Part D was a catalyst, a recession could change the employer sponsored healthcare paradigm and drive people to find insurance for themselves.  Making that happen quickly will be an issue.

What Does Spitzer Teach Us About Sharing Information?

While staying away from some of the issues around Spitzer, there is one that I found very interesting.  How does someone spend $4,000 (or $80,000) total without their spouse knowing?  I guess maybe when you have too much money that can happen.  I talked with 10 of my friends about it and in general they typically had shared accounts where many of them had their wife helping or managing the bills.  (My wife manages everything for us…thank goodness.)

But, it brought a question to my mind which is how much information and when do people share with their spouses about their health conditions.

  • When you’re dating, should you disclose all your medical conditions?  What about your family history?
  • When you’re diagnosed, how quickly does the average spouse disclose that information to their family?  How does this vary by disease?
  • And, what happens in the future when you can get a genomics test to tell you what diseases you are genetically prone to get?  Should you disclose that to a future spouse and at what point?

They were showing 23andMe on the Today Show a few days ago where you could pay $1,000 to get a test done that showed you your likelihood of getting certain diseases.  It also showed you interesting things like where your ancestors were from and whether you tasted bitter things or sweet things.  It is worth going to their site and looking at, but it brings lots of interesting questions to the table.  Do you get your kids tested?  Once you have the information, can you influence the future or do you take a fatalistic view of having no control?

23andme.jpg

Another Simple Example

I forgot the example I use the most around communications.

My first consulting project transitioning from architecture to business was for a friend’s architecture firm.  I was a 22-year old who thought I knew everything, and he was the president of a 50-person firm that he had been running for 20+ years and had taken over from his father.

His question to me was how could he figure out why he had lost several deals in a row.  I put together a survey and did structured interviews with recent wins, recent losses, and repeat customers.  In the end, the common feedback was around the way the firm presented themselves.  They talked about all the honors they won for their designs.

Interestingly, while some clients liked the idea of getting awards, most clients heard that and immediately translated it into two things: (1) not focused on their needs but on winning awards and (2) increased fees.  I worked with his team to re-frame the firm and how they presented.  We also institutionalized the survey process.

It’s now 15 years later, and he has become a great mentor for me.  They use the process, and he has continued to grow the company and win lots of work.

I was amazed at how one word positioned wrong in a 2-hour presentation was affecting them.

Customer Service Communications

Yesterday, we got a welcome surprise from a store where we had recently purchased a new couch.  They called to offer us a $750 gift card!  I had complained that I was unhappy with the installation of the couch and that it took 3 visits for them to get it resolved.

That made me start thinking about feedback and communications to companies.  I have been very successful at getting issues addressed:

  • The hotel I stay at in Michigan never has our rooms ready when we arrive.  They recently sent me a $100 gift certificate.
  • Another hotel I stayed at a few years ago had several issues that made our vacation there less than perfect.  They gave me all my frequent traveler points back.
  • An airline that had taken all my frequent flier miles for not flying them in three years reinstated my points.

I have had lots of luck where most people would simply give up.  If I reverse engineer why, it is many of the same reasons we tell clients when designing communication campaigns:

  1. Targeting matters.  [an executive is more willing to respond and take action than a customer service agent]
  2. Timing matters.  [when is the target not in meetings, working, and not having their messages screened]
  3. Channel matters.  [letter, fax, call, e-mail…which is mostly likely to get a response]
  4. Message matters.  [clear, to the point, call to action, fact-based]
  5. Tone matters.  [professional not angry]

Another great example I often use is around buying appliances.  When we were redesigning out kitchen 3 years ago, I went to the store and asked the first sales person if they did price matching.  He said yes but with a bunch of caveats.  I walked five feet from him to the next sales person and asked the same question.  He said of course, asked what we were interested in, our timing, and what research we had done.

I pulled out a list of the products we wanted with a grid of pricing.  Together we found the best time to buy, and I saved 40% off MSRP for the kitchen.  Since, I have bought appliances for a new house and had several other people buy from him.

What’s the point here??  You have to try multiple times.  If you want to communicate with someone and you have a legitimate value proposition for them, you need to reach out several times.

Remember…WIIMF…What’s In It For Me.

Health 2.0: Observations

(Note that this is a follow-up post to my summary of the conference.)

First, I have to say that I feel old. At Monday night’s reception, someone guessed that I was late 40’s (not that there’s anything wrong with that but it’s a decade off). For years, I wanted to be older (as a young consultant). Now, I am happy to slow that process down. Then, I had dinner last night with people in their 40’s and 50’s that are talking about Twittering and online music services and blogging for years. I felt like I was a parent listening to their teenagers talk even though I consider myself pretty technology savvy.

Second, I think it was a great conference although the next step has to include the involvement of the establishment.

Third, as I heard several people say, this is very different than your typical healthcare conference. No suits. Lots of sharing across seemly competitive companies. Fairly pointed. Patients involved.

Finally, here are a few of the thoughts / comments:

  • How can we create data that stays with the individual (i.e., portability)? As patients build content and networks and document their disease online, what happens with the logical consolidation and shakeout in the space? Do they lose their records as companies eventually go out of business?
  • Are we inevitably going toward a two tier system of healthcare for the health literate and/or wealthy and all others?
  • Where are the VCs? There were a few here. Even if they don’t buy that there is a model yet. I would think they could get great market data from attending and listening to companies.
  • Can we avoid the dotcom issue of creating things that are important to us but not scalable? Given the lack of a mechanism for systemically engaging patients in product design, this myopic view is a risk.
  • There is a definite funding question here. Do you make these DTC (direct-to-consumer) models where they pay? Do you go to the payors and ask them to fund it for their members on some PMPM basis? Or, do you take advertising dollars? And, if you take pharma advertising (for example), does that change people’s trust in the site?
  • There was a brief discussion which I think is really important. Do consumers trust a site that is “anti-establishment” and less slick or are they okay with a more “corporate” feel to a site that gives them better functionality and a better user interface?
  • Corporate blogs and personal blogs seemed to be the norm. A lot of these are companies built by passionate people that are either patients or caregivers driven into the Health 2.0 space by some event in their life. They actively use blogging and other social media to engage with a community. I mentioned the blog a few times and felt like … “of course…who doesn’t have a blog.”
  • I brought it up over lunch and heard someone else bring it up over dinner, but there was not a lot of discussion around lifecycle / phase. Patients move from newly diagnosed to ongoing care and eventually into a late stage. The solutions and their needs are different.
  • There has been talk about the hospitality industry (i.e., hotels) using employees, family members, etc. to pump up their ratings. Not sure how you control this, but is this an issue for MD ranking sites?
  • I heard very little about how to address the unengaged. Most of these solutions are on those active patients that care about their health, know they have a disease, and are willing to spend the time and effort to manage it. Just like with prescription non-compliance, the biggest issue is not managing those who don’t refill but identifying those that should be getting a prescription based on medical claims (or eventually genetic markers). This is clearly where the establishment can help. Managed care companies could use medical claims to identify people that would be benefit from these solutions and drive them use them. Assuming an ROI based on less hospital visits or some other criteria, it should pay for itself.
  • There was some discussion about mandated care for the uninsured and whether that was just a gimmee for the existing infrastructure. So, is the government rewarding those that haven’t fixed the system so far? It’s interesting. It made me draw an analogy to the auto industry. Certainly, we could fix the industry by limiting public transportation, developing a low cost car option (e.g., SmartCar), and having the government require every family to purchase a car.
  • There was a little discussion around what I would consider a typical business IT issue. Should the best-of-breed survive or is it better to settle for some lowest common denominator but provide one, integrated solution to patients. Right now, you have to use lots of sites to get different things done.
  • I thought about that Robin Williams movie about Patch Adams several times. Is our model changing to be less about administrative efficiency and more about care? [Not that I believe for a minute that we are efficient in healthcare.]
  • It made me realize that I need to think through the “Patient 2020” about what they will look like in 12 years. Transparent access to data. Integrated online tools. EMR. PHR. Community and care network tools. It won’t look anything like what we are trying to solve today.
  • Not enough talk about wellness and prevention. Some. It came up at the end around the fact that technology is typically focused on end stage solutions that are very expensive and can’t scale. Most of what was talked about here is focused on early stages and is very scalable. Clearly, this space faces the same issues as disease management. It’s logical. It seems to work in many cases, but clearly proving ROI on comparative populations while avoiding regression to the mean is difficult.
  • I think it was a person from Digitas that brought it up, but there was a comment about whether Beta is okay in healthcare. I think as long as the Beta (i.e., unfinished product) is about the UI (user interface) and not the clinical content then it should be fine.
  • iMetrikus brought up the idea of “activity based plan design” which conceptually I like.
  • Some of the models presented seemed focused on the payors as customers but would get traction with individuals that would pay. It would be interesting to see a model focused on the payors but with a DTC option which was completely automated for sales and payment in order to make it scalable.

It is important to find more patients than those that were there to be involved and help shape the future solution. It’s like HealthCentral “kick-starting” their communities by finding and recruiting (and possibly paying) 100 patients to be their super-users. As long as they are actual patients with the disease, I don’t mind.

Health 2.0: My Notes

I am just flying back from the Health 2.0 conference out in San Diego. I feel like there is a ton of information that I want to share so kudos to Matthew and Indu for the great job. (And, if you make it to the end of this post, you must really like the topic.)

I decided the best way to do this is in three posts: (1) Notes; (2) Companies; and (3) Observations. [Some people were doing live blogging which I just couldn’t do and keep focused.]

Here are a few of the other blog postings about the event:

So, let me begin here with my notes from the conference which began Monday with some informal sessions (user driven) and a deep-dive on a new vendor American Well. [I missed this event since it was so packed that it was standing room only in the hallway, and I was 5 minutes late getting off a conference call. That being said, they were in there for 3 hours so there must be something pretty interesting.] Tuesday was pretty much packed from breakfast (7:00) until I got back from dinner (11:00).

Matthew Holt:

  • Talked about his Health 2.0 picture of search, social networks, and tools. And, at the end of the conference, he showed a preliminary sketch of the model for the fall Health 2.0 conference where each of these are blown out into smaller segments.
  • Talked about the challenge of wrapping context around transitions. [In a side conversation, I thought someone else made a great point of saying that one of the biggest challenges will be how to drive change.]
  • Talked about the four stages of Health 2.0. I was soaking it in versus scribbling notes madly so all I got were phase 1 (user-generated content) and phase 2 (users as providers). But, I believe the later phases do (or should) show these models integrating into the establishment.

Susannah Fox (Pew Internet & American Life Project):
[Who by the way was a very good speaker and refreshingly gave a 30-minute presentation w/o any slides.]

  • Talked about an early 2000/2001 quote from the AMA on not trusting the Internet and a push to the physician. [That seems to have softened a bit over the years.]
  • Said that 40% of adults in America have a high school education or less which gets right to the issue of health literacy.
  • Talked about validity of online data. Researchers want to see date and source, but patients don’t look for that.
  • Talked about an article in a cancer magazine about misinformation which said the most highly correlated factor was a discussion around alternative medicine. Those sites often had misinformation on them.
  • She set the tone for the day by using the concept of a seven word expression to summarize your talk. Her’s was “Go Online. Use Common Sense. Be Skeptical.”
  • Pointed out that only 3% of e-patients report bad outcomes based on online data. [I think this whole discussion around what patients want in terms of research versus experiential data from their peers is very interesting.]
  • Talked about the white space between a “physican is omnipotent model” (my words) versus a “patient self-diagnosis world”. That is where we have to find a solution.
    • [A person from Europe who I talked with said that not only is their model different but the fact that they hold the physician on a pedestal makes some of these things impractical there.]
  • Talked about a new term for me – “participatory medicine”.
  • Said that Pew had classified people into three groups not on the concept of do you own a mobile device (for example) but on how you use it (e.g., do you feel like the device interrupts your life when it buzzes you, do you require help in setting up your devices).
    • 1/3 of Americans are “elite tech users” who own lots of devices
  • There is still minority distrust of some of these online tools. Some of this is generational.
    • The memory of the syphilis experiment is failing.
    • There is limited discussion of faith in these discussion areas which is important.
    • The older generation typically has less technical skills.
  • Her next seven word expression was “Recruit Docs. Let E-Patients Lead. Go Mobile.”
  • She described African American and Latino users of mobile devices as leveraging it as a Swiss Army knife versus a spoon. [I hope I use it more as a spork…which I assume is evolutionary over the spoon.] They use it more than TV or computers.

Patient Videos:

  • One of the most engaging segments was a series of video clips from patients.
    • The founder of i2y.org (I’m Too Young For This) spoke about being diagnosed with cancer at an early age and how he overcame the physical challenges and has become a go to destination for people about cancer.
    • The founder of Heron Sanctuary in Second Life talked about how she has limited mobility in real-life and her ability to create a world in second life where she can help people and gave examples of how people are using this virtual reality tool.
    • A young woman with RSD talked about how she has used ReliefInsite to manage her disease and pain. She also had the same issue of being “too young” to have RSD and the challenges of finding a physician to help her and believe her.

The format for most of the day was to have 3-4 founders or executives from companies get up and talk for 4 minutes on their company. Then a panel of people would comment and questions would get asked. On the one hand, it was a compelling, fast-based approach that kept your attention. [No nodding off at this conference.] On the other hand, it was heavy on marketing and light on really drilling down on the problem. [Although I am not sure that was the purpose or even achievable without making this a multi-day conference.]

So…here were a few of my quick notes on some of the companies. I will post another one trying to look at some screen shots and other observations. If you didn’t get mentioned here, it’s likely because I was simply watching or distracted. Hopefully, I catch everyone on the Health 2.0 Company post.

  • WEGO Health – allows consumers to rank content…i.e., directed search…gave example of search for some health topic that returned 98,000 links on Google, but only 50 here…option to score after consumer uses the link
    • Seems interesting. How often is it updated? How do you build awareness? Can it be part of a broader search engine? Seems like a likely acquisition to be another option like images or desktop from a search criteria within Google.
  • HealthCentral – biggest brand you don’t know (or something to that effect)…have 40+ sites around specific disease states…6M unique visits per month…new VC money…100 “expert patients” found to create initial communities…ability to create inspirational cartoons that summarize your story…good GUI
    • I really liked some of the features they demonstrated (in 5 minutes). They talked about creating micro-communities (e.g., spouses of people with a disease).
    • The idea of “recruiting” 100 “expert patients” to build an active community was one of the best I saw.

In preparation for discussion on patient-MD solutions, someone shared that only 2-3% of MDs allow appointments to be booked online. There was discussion that patients don’t really look to the Internet to find a physician or hospital. They look at what’s in-network and they ask their friends. There was an example given for Yelp which is used to rank restaurants, but allows people to review the physician. [A comment I heard later was when will we see a site ranking the sites that rank physicians.]

  • Carol (company name) – talked about mall concept in that people shop for something like a physical or allergy test not necessarily a specific type of MD…provide cash prices and insured prices
    • Seemed interesting. I will have to think more about how I search.
  • Vitals.com – I talked about this company on the blog a few weeks ago…still like the graphics…saw a few other features that I hadn’t noticed such as customizing the search criteria and using slider bars so that you get weighted recommendations

I thought there was a good discussion on why would an MD participate in a ranking site.

  • Help them sub-specialize (i.e., I want to treat knee pain not neck pain).
  • Allow them to attract the right type of patient that matches their style and focus.
  • Ego…allowing them to manage comments.

IDEO, the famous industrial design, company facilitated a lunch workshop and talked at the conference. For simplicity, I will blend both notes here. (see old post about IDEO book)

  • Talked about user-centric design which is key. At lunch asked us to come up with a solution to address the problems of diabetes patients. Showed us four interviews with diabetics. But the stress was not on solving what we thought was their problem, but trying to actually listen to what they say and do in order to find something. Key point.
  • Talked about empathic research showing that we don’t say what we think, do what we should logically do an online car loan, or even do what we think we do.
  • Talked about a book called Thoughtless Acts.
  • Gave examples of project with Bank of America that showed how most people round up their credit card payments so they started a “Keep the Change” campaign which allowed them to attract 2M new members.
  • Walked through an example of creating the Humalog pen for Eli Lilly.
  • Talked about creating a new bike design.
  • All of them were common in the framework they use and their focus on the person/user/patient/member.
  • Lunch was an interesting workshop where you listened to the videos, identified issues, brainstormed solutions, picked a solution to “pitch”, and then shared your idea with your neighbor. At our table…
    • Saw problem largely as educational / informational
      • Don’t know what to expect
      • Don’t know where to get information
      • Don’t understand lifecycle and treatment plan options
      • Don’t know what to do with the pump
    • Talked about everything from portal to device solutions
    • Settled on an iPump concept that would blend an iPod with an insulin pump and foster a community around it to develop cases (e.g., a belt that it fit into as part of a formal dress), videos to download to it on education, connectivity to trigger auto-refills, etc.

Then we had several discussions by physicians that were blending the old model of house calls with technology. Seems very cool (for those that can afford it). Although one example was relevant, it missed the masses. One showed a trader who was too busy to leave the trading floor, but he had a sore throat so the physician came to his office, took a culture, and gave him an antibiotic.

  • One great point that they made was the benefit of seeing the patient’s environment (i.e., home) in helping them manage a disease.
  • I loved the fact that they would send me an e-mail with my notes from the visit rather than trying to scribble things down while they are talking.
    • Of course, this begs the question of literacy and teaching physicians how to communicate in simple, non-medical language.
  • Another great point was the issue of technology as a good unidirectional solution. For example, if the physician wants to know whether something works, an e-mail is very efficient if it does. Leaving a voicemail so that you play tag back and forth only to realize the patient is feeling better is a waste of time.
  • Jay Parkinson referred to himself as the “Geek Squad” for healthcare (think Best Buy computer technicians). Great analogy. He also showed this seemingly very intuitive and easy to use EMR called Myca which I believe he has built.
  • Somebody tied this back to the physician ranking discussion by asking how this new flexibility of business model would be captured and tracked on those sites (e.g., does MD respond to e-mail).
  • I can remember if I jotted this down or one of them said it but I have “More Time. Save Money. Less Costs.” I think this was in response to a question I e-mailed in about how these new models were affecting the compensation and lifestyle of the physicians.

Phreesia talked about their tablet solution (i.e., electronic clipboard) for the physician’s office. They had an interesting statistic that 49M Americans move each year so address data is constantly changing. (Not to mention plan coverage, drug use, etc.) They are getting 200-300 new MDs a month to sign-up for this.

I don’t see myself using it, but this is an interesting option. Organized Wisdom talked about their product LiveWisdom which allows users to leverage a live person (I assume MD or RPh or RN.) via chat to address questions they might otherwise contact their MD about. They pay $1.99 per minute.

  • As they admitted, they are limited in scope and often have to refer the patient to an MD. They seemed to me limiting, but creating an opportunity to partner with American Well who helps you find an MD, sees if they have time to talk, and launches an interactive video session and chat session with the MD right then for a pre-agreed upon rate.

There were two patients there that were involved in lots of feedback sessions. The first was a woman who has lost 144 pounds (w/o going on The Biggest Loser) and has become an online advocate and support mechanism for lots of people using DailyStrength. The second was Amy Tenderich who is a very active diabetic and blogs at DiabetesMine.

Amy’s story was great. Her blog is very engaging and as Matthew said it is “thought by many to be the #1 blog for patients“. I had a chance to talk with her and her husband and heard a lot about how it started and the response. It is a great story, and she is very knowledgeable and was willing to really push the patient-centric agenda at the conference.

Someone made the point about linking patient costs to compliance with their care plan which I have blogged about before. I completely agree that the patient should be rewarded for using self-service options (web vs. live agent) and for staying compliant.

ReliefInsite talked about their solution and shared that 1 in 6 Americans suffer from chronic pain. No matter what the CEO said, he couldn’t do better than the opening patient video which used their solution. (Which he said was a surprise to him.)…seemed like a good, interactive tools with nice reporting.

Emmi Solutions showed their online educational tool which had videos built in a conversational tone and used animation to help people understand procedures and their disease. Seemed great. Said that informed patients are less likely to sue.

MedEncentive is one that I will have to spend more time looking at. It plays to the incentive question and rewarding patients and MDs. They talked about a 10:1 ROI and said the medically literate patients have less hospital visits.

[Completely off topic, but from the conference, I heard someone talking about CouchSurfing which is apparently a “network” where you allow people (that you don’t know) to come sleep on your couch. I thought that died with hitchhiking in the 60s.]

A consultant from Mercer commented that some large employers with physicians on staff are more effective [at health and cost management] than small health plans. Not sure if that was a complement to employers or an insult to health plans.

BenefitFocus which automates the set-up of your benefits (imagine no more paperwork to enroll) had a great video showing the future with personal consultants (via hologram), biometric signature, and other cool things. [I have heard good things about them for years although they never returned my phone calls several years ago even with name dropping one of their biggest investors.]

Virgin Healthmiles was there and talked about their pedometer which is tracked online. They also have an employer kiosk for tracking weight and body fat. Offline, he also told me that they are rolling out connections which will be on the treadmills and other machines at participating gyms. I am a big fan of what they are doing. I believe he said they recommend 7,000 steps a day per person (and think he told me that 2500 is a mile).

Stan Nowak (my boss) presented the Silverlink story talking about using technology to engage patients, the importance of capturing data, extreme personalization, and showed recent success improving compliance by 3x by rapidly doing a series of pilots.

  • I am not sure I have figured out our seven word description but here’s a few attempts:
    • Patients Are Different. Personalization Matters. Be Proactive.
    • Preference Based Communications Engage Patients & Drive ROI.
    • Segment. Learn. Interact. Empower. Use Communications Appropriately.

iMetrikus talked about their solution which connects over 50 biometric devices today into backend healthcare systems. They charge $3 PMPM which caused me to raise an eyebrow. It is a great solution and integration is a nightmare, but that seems like a lot of money. But, I am all about ROI. If I can get better return on this than on another project and it exceeds my cost of capital, why wouldn’t I do it.

iConecto didn’t present but had a booth and introduced a section. But, I love the concept of using play (e.g., Wii) to drive health.

To be fair, I will even include my notes about Eliza Corporation (our competition). Their CEO and our CEO did a podcast with Matthew the weekend before which you can listen to here. The messaging is fairly similar (although I have a strong bias about why us). She talked about tailoring [of messaging] being the new black. She talked about using clinical and demographic data to drive programs. They are a good company, and it was well done. [I was even flattered that several of their employees said that they read my blog.] Both companies commented on how they feel old (~7 years) compared to a lot of the companies presenting here (~2 years).

  • One thing that I find strange is for two companies that pretty evenly split the healthcare marketplace for Strategic HealthComm is that we are located within 10 miles of each other near Boston.

At one point, there was a discussion around ROI especially on new technologies and how to get that first big project. One of the panelists said that a 1:1 ROI over two years would be sufficient. [Not true for any company that I have worked at or consulted to.]

The final panel discussion and closing statements had a lot of good content:

  • Discussion of the patient as a provider and what that could mean.
  • Discussion of importance of sharing information across solutions.
  • The concept of citizen (European) versus patient.
  • From the Wired magazine participant, discussion around fidelity versus flexibility:
    • Disk versus MP3
    • HDTV versus Tivo
    • Microsoft versus Google
  • Importance of moving upstream in care
    • Disease management
    • Wellness
    • Prevention
    • Diet
  • As part of upstream discussion, talked about involving the food companies and used the analogy of inviting the oil companies to a green conference. [I wondered where the MCOs were, the hospital networks, and the politicians.]
  • The author of the book “Demanding Medical Excellence” (who I believe is part of the Health 2.0 staff talked about “random acts of doctoring” and the issue of solving healthcare for the few or the masses.
  • Indu talked about building a new system versus extending and improving the existing system. [A great question]
  • I think it was Matthew that brought up the issue of designing for credibility.

Wow! If you made it through this thesis, good for you. I hope it’s helpful. It is certainly easier than me trying to find my notes two months from now or sending a bunch of e-mails to people on sections they might find interesting.

Global Eating Habits

I typically delete almost all e-mails that I get at home with attachments (based on general paranoia about viruses). But, my cousin sent me one about global eating habits which is basically a photo essay with a few “statistics”. Of course, it has no source so I post it as believable and good for dialog, but don’t bet the farm on it.  But, given the rising food prices globally, this may be a more front page issue soon.

My two big takeaways were:

  1. Our eating habits reflect our obesity issue.
  2. Wow. A little money can make a big difference in the fight against poverty.

Germany: The Melander family of Bargteheide – Food expenditure for one week: 375.39 Euros or $500.07

families-2.jpg

United States: The Revis family of North Carolina – Food expenditure for one week $341.98

families-us.jpg

Mexico: The Casales family of Cuernavaca – Food expenditure for one week: 1,862.78 Mexican Pesos or $189.09

families-4.jpg

Poland: The Sobczynscy family of Konstancin-Jeziorna – Food expenditure for one week: 582.48 Zlotys or $151.27

families-5.jpg

Egypt: The Ahmed family of Cairo – Food expenditure for one week: 387.85 Egyptian Pounds or $68.53

families-egypt.jpg

Ecuador: The Ayme family of Tingo – Food expenditure for one week: $31.55

families-7.jpg

Bhutan: The Namgay family of Shingkhey Village – Food expenditure for one week: 224.93 ngultrum or $5.03

families-8.jpg

Chad: The Aboubakar family of Breidjing Camp – Food expenditure for one week: 685 CFA Francs or $1.23

families-chad.jpg