The Right to Healthcare

Right to HealthcareDavid Williams, on the WorldHealthCareBlog, has a pretty comprehensive Q & A for employers and health plans curious about medical tourism. He covers just about all the angles, so I don't want to repeat that here. What I would like to add is that the biggest problem that employers and health plans face (more...)

Posted by Dan Axel in Events - Tags: , - Comments (0)
23 April

Trusera, out of beta & different enough to be interesting

Keith Schorsch is a busy boy. Not only did he write a much commented piece about Google Health and PHRs on this very station last week, but he also popped by last week to tell me about the new look for Trusera. Several of you saw Trusera launch at the Health 2.0 Conference last March. As of today they’ve removed the Beta tag, and have introduced a new look and new features.

The way Trusera is going about things is by collecting stories and journal entries, and then essentially parsing the keywords and text in those stories to connect people with others with similar situations. The distinction between this and most other social networking sites is that Trusera doesn’t have “forums ” or “channels” per se, but uses its search technology (somewhat inspired by Amazon where several of the founding team came from) to match lurkers and contributers with content and people relevant to them. There’s also some neat tools to help people build their stories with helpful suggestions appearing to the side as they’re being written — think of the Microsoft paper clip but done well! (At this stage it doesn’t take detailed self-reported patient clinical information a la PatientsLikeMe or PHRs).

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23 April

Information Therapy time (again)

The Center for Information Therapy has—in a move aimed at upsetting me personally—moved its conference from Park City, Utah, to Washington DC. Today along with some other THCB regulars like star Health 2.0 Ranger Jen McCabe Gorman, and Craig Stoltz, I’m in the Newseum — the new Museum of news media and the First Amendment. Here the Center for Information Therapy is literally and figuratively moving the Information Therapy debate into the core of the Washington Policy process.

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22 April