Podcast

Interview with healthcare thought leaders, social media professionals and entrepreneurs in the healthcare space.

Thrive 4-7: Teaching Wellness Skills

Do companies and corporations finally get the importance of wellness programs for their employees? Connie Mester is betting her startup on the idea that they are. She has taken 16 years of experience in healthcare and health insurance to found a company focused on helping individuals learn how to achieve emotional wellness. That may sound esoteric but their work is based on evidence based medicine that fills a gap in emotional health support. Thrive 4-7’s first product is Mevii – a mobile tool to teach and support personal skills to manage wellness. Listen to our conversation or drop in to the time stamps below.

Mevii screenshot00:00 Introduction
00:45 Meet Connie Mester
02:38 An educational potpourri
04:10 A gap in emotional health support
04:56 Learning how to deal with stress
06:10 What is Thrive 4-7
06:20 Mind-Body Connection
07:29 Research based application to teach skills
09:29 Wearables
12:09 Mevii
12:27 Designed for the individual
15:35 Cognitive behavioral therapy
19:50 Mobile and privacy
21:28 Female Audience “Who knew!”
23:10 Future plans for Seniors & Adolescents
7 dimensions of wellness23:50 Journaling
29:20 Building a wellness ecosystem
31:05 Always in beta
37:45 Can an individual sign up?
38:20 Business model
38:44 Growth plan
40:13 What does Thrive 4-7 mean?
41:55 What does Mevii mean?
43:20 Social media tip: Dr. David Stukus

More links.

 

Twitter Evangelist @AllergyKidsDoc

It’s always fun talking to another Twitter fan! Dr. David Stukus is a real Twitter evangelist, Tweeting under @AllergyKidsDoc, recruiting other physicians to the platform and demonstrating best practices. A Pediatric Allergist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Dr. Stukus is a believer in the power of Twitter because he has seen it and been a part of making it happen. From connecting with a patient’s parent to arrange an appointment to speaking at national conferences, Twitter has made things happen for Dr. Stukus. Listen to our conversation or drop in at the time stamps below.

@AllergyKidsDocIntroduction
Dr. Dave Stukus
Nationwide Children’s Hospital Allergy & Asthma
Local or National patients
What’s up with peanuts?
Hold off on bath time?
Microbiome (really – we talked about it)
Brother-in-Law’s fault
Twitter for education
Global Connections
2nd level of communication
Medical News
Follow Tweeting at global conferences
Allergy Tweet Chat #Asthma2015
Parents in Twitter?
Sharing content
Online medical advice
Dr. Farris Timmi “Moral obligation”
Unreliable health websites
Have you been targeted online?
Parents “get” social media
Are you a solo practioner
“Dr. Dave is an alien”
Twitter recruitment: Dr. Amber Patterson @TheAllergyDoc
Nationwide Children’s Hospital committed to social media
What other social media do you use?
700 Kids Blog
Hootsuite tool of choice
Using other media in the Twitter feed
How much time a day do you spend in Twitter?
Social Media Tip: Tom Lee “Use hashtags”

Get Social Health Academy course announcement: Coming this June – The Get Social Health Academy: Online training in social media for healthcare. The first courses to be offered will be “LinkedIn for Healthcare Professionals” and “Social Media for Healthcare Practice Owners.”

Really Local Marketing with Tyson Downs

Have you ever thought about how your doctor or dentist finds new patients? For the vast majority of healthcare practitioners their goal is not to be an internationally known medical thought-leader. What they want is to serve their patients, help make their communities healthy and run a successful business. To accomplish the objective, healthcare professionals need to have some online local marketing business savvy or know where to find it. I invited Tyson Downs, owner of the Titan Web Agency to visit Get Social Health and talk about website optimization, really local marketing and social media. We used a local dentist as an example but all Tyson’s suggestions and tips are relevant for any small (or large) business. Listen in to some great ideas on Get Social Health or drop in on topics that interest you at the time stamps below. (My apologies for the poor technical quality. Sometimes the internet does not want to cooperate.)

10 Problems with Social Media for Dentists

 

 

 

 

Tyson Downs family 1Titan Web Agency

“10 Minute Healthcare Marketing Podcast”

Tyson Downs on LinkedIn

 

Physician Liaison Programs – Critical to Practice Growth

A shocking statistic – a specialty medical practice can depend on patient referrals for as much as 60% – 90% of their business. That makes an active, productive physician liaison program integral to a successful practice. Joining Get Social Health is Amanda Chay, Director of the Physician Liaison program at White Coat Designs, a healthcare marketing, web design and social media firm. Amanda was very gracious in sharing her insights and experience in what goes into creating and managing a physician liaison program. Listen in to our conversation or jump in at the time stamps below.

White Coat Designs00:00 Introduction
01:15 What is a physician Liaison?
02:00 Should the physician be a liaison?
02:45 Does a practice need a full time representative?
03:20 What makes a good physician liaison?
04:25 Is is just about the relationship?
05:26 Liaison is “the glue”
06:40 Is being a physician liaison like being a pharma rep?
07:50 Pharma reps can be good physician liasion
07:50 So – Bagels?
08:38 How does the White Coat Designs program work?
10:00 How does the business side of the business work?
11:40 What’s the value of a patient?
15:05 Pressure is on for unaffiliated practices
16:05 Where’s the money in healthcare?
17:23 What’s the difference between building relationship with a sports medicine versus oncology practice?
18:58 Relationships & “Strategery”
20:05 What data does a practice use to assess their growth?
20:30 What kind of market data does a practice need to market themselves?
21:01 What is the process for setting up a new practice?
23:05 Are any of your clients still on paper?
23:51 Do physician liasions use social media?
25:00 How do you determine if you are ready for a physician liasion program?
27:00 Sometime practices don’t track their referrals regularly
28:00 Does HIPAA or Privacy play a role?
29:53 Social Media Tip: Phyllis Khare’s website – “4 ways to increase your online presence”

Join the email list and be the first to know about the Get Social Health Academy – online learning for healthcare practices and professionals.

Mayo Clinic’s New Social Media Summit

Lee Aase visited the Get Social Health podcast to talk about the new format for the Mayo Clinic’s Social Media Summit scheduled for June 15-16, 2015 in Rochester, MN. Taking a cue from Mayo Clinic’s commitment to innovation, the Center for Social Media team, the Board of Advisers and event committee took an opportunity to re-imagine the conference. Switching from speakers on the stage to a very hands-on format, the 2015 Social Media Summit will offer case studies, workshops and collaborative problem solving.

Hear more about the event during our interview or listen in to the time stamps below.

Social-Media-Week
00:00 Introduction
00:48 Time to Innovate
02:30 New Residency format
04:00 Grand Rounds with Dr. Wendy Sue Swanson
05:30 Be prepared before you come
06:50 Mayo Model of Conferences
08:45 “Selling” the conference to your boss
10:30 Members get free webinars
11:25 Networking face-to-face
12:30 Bronze, Silver and Platinum Fellows
12:44 Two new Bronze Fellows announced
14:00 2014 Silver Fellow Lisa Ramshaw
14:25 What is a Platinum Fellow
16:18 @SeattleMamaDoc
17:45 When’s the party?
18:30 Who should attend the Social Media Summit?
21:23 Do we need a “social media summit” or an “integrated marketing summit?” Bob West
23:45 Event timing
25:18 Colleen Young , MCSMHN Community Site
26:37 Dan Hinmon, Community Manager, MCSMHN
27:00 Chris Boyer, website re-launch at North Shore LIJ

29:20 Social Media Tip: Dr. Kate Hersov – “Speak to kids on their level”

Healthcare Hackathon for Caregivers

Franklin D. RooseveltCaregivers of people with dementia face many challenges. To aid in problem solving for them, NCHICA, Northwest AHEC and Quintiles sponsored a healthcare hackathon on April 11-12, 2015.

00:00 Open and Introduction

        • Janet Kennedy introduction

01:35 Jennifer Anderson, NCHICA

          • 1st Event
          • Why this topic?
          • Event preparation
          • New Executive Director for NCHICA

06:40 Chris Jones, Northwest AHEC

          • How did the healthcare hackathon come to be?
          • “From Sage on the Stage to Guide on the Side”

10:26 Healther Altman, Carol Woods

          • Wearing many hats & Innovation Coach
          • Changes in the geriatric space
          • “Person First” language

14:58 Katherine Lavoie, UNC Graduate Student & Volunteer

          • How she became involved in the event
          • What are the challenges feaced by Healthcare Administrations?
          • What do you hope to gain from the weekend?

16:30 Alex Joyner, Student at Nash Community College & event finalist

          • Why did you come to this healthcare hackathon?
          • Senior’s use of technology
          • Lessons from his family

19:13 Dave Potenziani, Intrahealth

          • Health informatics
          • mHero
          • Open source tech

21:48 Tom Caurso,

          • Innovation Coach
          • Wearable tech researcher and entrepreneur
          • What do you think about the specificity of the topic?

25:07 Gail Hinte, Himformatics & Innovation Coach

          • Benefits of coaching

28:58 eHealth Transformation Challenge Winners. Team Leads Karen Appert & Soumajeet Roy

30:58 John Reites, Quintiles

          • “Co-Conspiritor”
          • Healthcare hackathon development time
          • Improvements for next time
          • Why is Quintiles involved?

34:58 Get Social Health Academy announcement

eHealth Transformation Challenge (Event website)Photo courtesy of NW AHEC

The Problem: Caregivers of those with dementia are tasked with conducing a diverse range of activities to support loved ones. They need technology tools to support them in caring for their loved ones in innovative ways.

The Challenge: To design and pitch technology-based solutions that have the potential to lighten the burden that falls on family caregivers, particularly by helping them to coordinate the demanding tasks and the complex networks of relationships involved with caring for others.

The Advantage: This inaugural NCHICA event will connect you with other innovators and industry veterans in the Triangle, NC area. Food and awards totaling $4,500 to the top designs will be provided. Tickets are just $10 for students and $90 for industry professionals. Sign-up today as space is limited

Students, clinicians, programmers, hackers, entrepreneurs, and caregiver advocates will gather and team up at Quintiles to compete in a design race to improve public health. Will you be there?

The winning team will design and pitch a viable and realistic solution to improve quality of life of caregivers of the elderly in NC.

Inspiration speakers:

Karen Appert – 20 year Caregiver and Marketing Professional

Susan Adams -Professional Gerontologist specializing in Aging in Place

Connie Bishop – Director – Compliance and Quality/Risk Management, Piedmont Health Services, Inc.

David Potenziani – Senior Informatics Adviser at IntraHealth International

Event Recap

Weekend in video for the weekend is here:

Interested in attending future events? Sign up for the Northwest AHEC mailing list

Or follow us on Northwest AHEC social channels

Lead sponsors NCHCIA, Northwest AHEC & Quintiles

Prize sponsors Booz Allen Hamilton, Himformatics, Duke MMCI program, Validic

Conf sponsors Carol Woods, RENCI, Validic