Monday, March 29, 2010

Chronic Disease and the Internet

"WASHINGTON – A new report finds that adults living with chronic diseases are less likely to have access to the Internet, but are also more likely to use social media as a tool for coping with their condition.

The report, which was conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project and the California HealthCare Foundation, found that only 62 percent of adults living with chronic disease go online, compared with 81 percent of adults who report no chronic diseases.

Lack of Internet access, not lack of interest in the topic, is the primary reason for the gap, according to the report. In fact, when demographic factors are controlled, Internet users living with chronic disease are slightly more likely than other Internet users to access health information online and user-generated content such as doctor and hospital reviews and blogs, online forums or discussions.

"We can now add chronic disease to the list of attributes which have an independent, negative effect on someone's likelihood to have Internet access, along with age, education, and income level," says Kristen Purcell, an associate director of the Pew Internet Project and a co-author of the report.

According to the report, more than any other group, people living with chronic disease remain strongly connected to offline sources of medical assistance and advice such as health professionals, friends, family and books. However, once they have Internet access, people living with chronic disease report significant benefits from the health resources found online.

"The deck is stacked against people living with chronic disease. They are disproportionately offline. They often have complicated health issues, not easily solved by the addition of even the best, most reliable, medical advice," says Susannah Fox, an associate director of the Pew Internet Project and a co-author of the report. "But those who are online have a trump card. They have each other. Those who have access use the Internet like a secret weapon, unearthing and sharing nuggets of information found online."

Looking at the population as a whole, 51 percent of American adults living with chronic disease have looked online for any of the health topics included in the survey, such as information about a specific disease, a certain medical procedure, or health insurance. By comparison, 66 percent of adults who report no chronic conditions use the Internet to gather health information.

The report found that information about prescription or over-the-counter drugs is the topic that draws the most significant interest among Internet users living with chronic disease, compared with other Internet users.

The report, is based on a national telephone survey which included 2,253 adults, 36 percent of whom are living with chronic disease (heart conditions, lung conditions, high blood pressure, diabetes, cancer)." ~ HealthCareITNews.com

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Monday, March 1, 2010

Bi-directional mobile software launched for hospitals

"SANTA CRUZ, CA – A bi-directional mobile software solution created for hospital systems is being touted as "a giant leap forward for healthcare IT."

Validus Medical Systems, Inc., a Santa Cruz, Calif.-based health IT company, launched the Validus inTouch software system developed by a team of physicians, software engineers, cloud computing experts, and network security specialists with the goal of improving the quality, safety and efficiency of healthcare.

Validus officials said the new system will help eliminate the incidence of costly test duplication, medical errors, and prescription oversights that lead to medical misadventures.

The inTouch software suite is designed to be used from any browser using a smart phone, tablet PC, desktop, or laptop. Validus officials listed off some of the core features of this network-based suite of tools that include: comprehensive computerized physician order entry, real-time patient information, speech recognition, customizable order sets, complete end-to-end medication reconciliation, discharge document creation, integration with electronic medical records, and support for existing paper workflow.

"We talked with a lot of doctors and hospital CIOs, and heard a lot of horror stories and frustration with current IT solutions," said Validus founder and CEO David Kashtan. Basically, if physicians are savvy to Google, downloading or ordering a book on Amazon, said Kashtan, they can learn how to use inTouch.

San Ramon Regional Medical Center and Los Alamitos Medical Center, both members of the Tenet Healthcare system, were early adopters of the solution suite.

“Validus is solving problems that other companies don't seem to be able to solve, and doing it in a cost effective way,” said San Ramon Regional Medical Center CEO Gary Sloan.

“The typical approach is to force doctors to adapt to the hardware and software provided by the hospital," said Los Alamitos Medical Center CEO Michele Finney. "The Validus approach has been to adapt to the devices the physicians already use in their medical practices and personal lives."

Validus officials said the software suite meets HIPAA privacy standards and best practices for data security. The end result is that doctors can access a patient's medical history, order lab tests and results or medications, and communicate in real-time with other team members without putting patient information at risk, officials said." ~ HealthcareITnews.com

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