HealthCamp San Diego 2011 will be hosted at the Rady School of Management on the beautiful campus of UC San Diego. HealthCamp is a collaborative experience designed to create ‘open space’ for learning, collaboration and creative expression.
For more details see the FULL Conference ProgramHERE!
A Working Meeting to Build on October 2010’s meeting and plan for September 2011, moderated by Jane Sarasohn-Kahn – Register Here!
don’tdeletethis
This meeting continues the dialogue started at the Health 2.0 meeting in San Francisco in October 2010 which brought together over one hundred patients and advocates who shared stories about being patients, and using, sharing and co-creating health data. That meeting resulted in a Patients 2.0 manifesto for disruptive innovation of the health system the bottom-line of which was to Recognize Our Impact (ROI) — as patients who have a stake in their own as well as fellow patients’ health and health care.
The conclusion of the San Francisco meeting was the development of seven guidelines we must follow if we wish to dramatically change the health system:
1. Engage emotionally AND analytically
2. Let patients control their own data (and add to it)
3. Include the patient’s voice in decision-making (care, development, policy)
4. Engage people and provide services wherever they are
5. Recognize all stakeholders – patients, caregivers, and providers –
as equal partners with different roles
6. Network everyone, including those who aren’t online
7. Here’s the real ROI: Recognize Our Impact.
At this 2-hour meeting, we’ll review those Patient 2.0 tenets, brainstorm themes and ideas for moving forward, and drive toward some next steps for convening a Patients 2.0 session just prior to the Health 2.0 Conference scheduled for September in San Francisco.
This event will be free of charge to patients, and also free for Health 2.0 Conference attendees, although it is in a smaller room and we reserve the right to limit admission.
Founded by Gary & Mary West, the WWHI is a major new player not only in San Diego, but also nationally. WWHI is working with the VA and many other institutions to promote innovation, but also spending its own money on new applications and devices—all intended to make quality healthcare both more ubiquitous and cheaper. The senior leadership (including President Don Casey and Chief Medical Officer Joe Smith will show you the facility, tell you what they’re doing, and host a get-to-meet you session.
Kaiser Permanente Garfield Specialty Care Center … Sign Up Here!
don’tdeletethis
While KP needs no introduction, you may not know that in San Diego i) they’ve been working on exchanging data from their HealthConnect system with the VA, ii) are part of the San Diego Beacon community, and iii) opened a new specialty care center just last September. Our friends at KP, including Permanente’s S. California CMIO John Mattison, will host a tour of the center and show a demo of HealthConnect and some of that data interoperability.
1:00pm
Live Judging – Health 2.0 Developer Challenge Code-a-thon
See what’s been built in a day (or so) by some sharp teams of developers from around the United States as part of the Health 2.0 Developer Challenge.
New to Health 2.0? Confused about what this Web 2.0 stuff is and what it’s got to do with healthcare? Don’t understand “unplatforms”? Can’t identify a data utility layer? Want a refresher on the 4 stages of Health 2.0? Want to know what happened to “user-generated healthcare”?
Matthew & Indu will give a version of the longer keynote addresses they give to audiences outside of Health 2.0 conferences to catch you up!
4:00pm
Afternoon Break
5:00pm
The Opening Night Curtain Raiser
Hosted by: Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0
Indu & Matthew will kick off the conference by introducing the three themes of:
Making health care cheaper
The evolution of research
Prevention, wellness, exercise & food
You’ll get a taste of the topics and the demos to come, but we’ll start on the conversation and the controversy with several key players, and introduce a couple of “timely” issues.
And in a first for Health 2.0 we’re going to do this in a series of Fireside Chats using a chain of interviewers and interviewees:
Food/Prevention
Matthew Holt, Health 2.0 talks to Alan Greene about, Whiteout, his new campaign to remove white rice cereal from infant diets.
Then Alan and Abbe Don, IDEO discuss Abbe’s personal journey to have a healthy lifestyle through an immersion program at the Pritkin institute.
Stephen then talks to Nikolai Kirienko, Crohnology.MD one of Project HealthDesign’s grantees on a mind-blowing personal story of how capturing data via patient narrative saved his life.
Pregnancy and Health 2.0
J.D. Kleinke and Amy Romano, Childbirth Connection talk about J.D.’s new book Catching Babies, where the field of OB/GYN serves as a microcosm for debates in the wider healthcare system.
Amy will then discuss with Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0 the data- and emotion-driven decisions she’s facing about her upcoming event.
6:45pm
Opening Night Party
Immediately outside the main conference room, in the foyer, where we’ll be feasting and mingling Health 2.0-style.
One area where Health 2.0 technologies show great promise and some early market penetration is in tools for wellness. Employers, consumers, and even Medicare are now paying for programs and services that don’t look like traditional medical care, but may have great benefits. But in a world in which the food supply, and the physical and social environment seem to be programming us for obesity, what can the Health 2.0 community do? We’ll take a closer look at how Health 2.0 tools can become part of the fabric for better micro-and macro-decisions about food and healthy behaviors, with a special focus on how we can make a real contribution to ending childhood obesity.
Moderated by: Indu Subaiya, Co-Chairman and CEO, Health 2.0
The emergence of user-generated content, and the rise of patient involvement in Health 2.0 is radically changing research in both discovery and clinical practice. It’s raising important questions. What is peer review? What is evidence? And what’s appropriate methodology in a world in which data are being generated and released from so many diverse sources so quickly? We’ll be looking across the spectrum from genomics to clinical trial recruiting all the way to clinical research and decisions made by providers and consumers in everyday practice.
During the lunch, Dr. Koh, Mr. Park and other HHS staff will introduce the national health communication and health IT priorities for the next decade and challenge the health IT developer community to build applications that will help the Nation reach our Healthy People 2020 goals and objectives. The purpose is to share ideas about how to use these objectives to inform app development and to track and advance their impact on health.
Moderated by: Matthew Holt, Co-Chairman, Health 2.0
Inspired by a keynote we heard some time back from Mark Smith at California Health Care Foundation and by the work of organizations such as West Wireless Health Institute, we’re going to push the envelope on how Health 2.0 technologies and the companies using them can actually lower the cost of health care. We’ll be showing new models for care delivery, new Health 2.0 technologies that reduce costs, and new technology models that take advantage of lightweight tools and rapid cycles for development and deployment. We will also address alternate funding models that are tailored for a lower cost, faster and more iterative approach in health technology innovation.
For more than a day the discussion has been about how health care can be cheaper, how Health 2.0 can advance research, and what to do about our national (and international crisis) with lifestyle induced disease. In the final session, some key players will discuss their vision for the future of health care, and the role Health 2.0 will play.
Agenda
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Pre-Conference Activities
HealthCamp San Diego
For more details see the FULL Conference Program HERE!
Or Agenda Overview HERE
Monday, March 21, 2011
Patients 2.0 Working Group
A Working Meeting to Build on October 2010’s meeting and plan for September 2011, moderated by Jane Sarasohn-Kahn – Register Here!
don’tdeletethis
This meeting continues the dialogue started at the Health 2.0 meeting in San Francisco in October 2010 which brought together over one hundred patients and advocates who shared stories about being patients, and using, sharing and co-creating health data. That meeting resulted in a Patients 2.0 manifesto for disruptive innovation of the health system the bottom-line of which was to Recognize Our Impact (ROI) — as patients who have a stake in their own as well as fellow patients’ health and health care.
The conclusion of the San Francisco meeting was the development of seven guidelines we must follow if we wish to dramatically change the health system:
1. Engage emotionally AND analytically
2. Let patients control their own data (and add to it)
3. Include the patient’s voice in decision-making (care, development, policy)
4. Engage people and provide services wherever they are
5. Recognize all stakeholders – patients, caregivers, and providers –
as equal partners with different roles
6. Network everyone, including those who aren’t online
7. Here’s the real ROI: Recognize Our Impact.
At this 2-hour meeting, we’ll review those Patient 2.0 tenets, brainstorm themes and ideas for moving forward, and drive toward some next steps for convening a Patients 2.0 session just prior to the Health 2.0 Conference scheduled for September in San Francisco.
This event will be free of charge to patients, and also free for Health 2.0 Conference attendees, although it is in a smaller room and we reserve the right to limit admission.
Register Today!
Take a Tour
Take a tour of a local institution, including:
don’tdeletethis
Founded by Gary & Mary West, the WWHI is a major new player not only in San Diego, but also nationally. WWHI is working with the VA and many other institutions to promote innovation, but also spending its own money on new applications and devices—all intended to make quality healthcare both more ubiquitous and cheaper. The senior leadership (including President Don Casey and Chief Medical Officer Joe Smith will show you the facility, tell you what they’re doing, and host a get-to-meet you session.
don’tdeletethis
While KP needs no introduction, you may not know that in San Diego i) they’ve been working on exchanging data from their HealthConnect system with the VA, ii) are part of the San Diego Beacon community, and iii) opened a new specialty care center just last September. Our friends at KP, including Permanente’s S. California CMIO John Mattison, will host a tour of the center and show a demo of HealthConnect and some of that data interoperability.
Live Judging – Health 2.0 Developer Challenge Code-a-thon
See what’s been built in a day (or so) by some sharp teams of developers from around the United States as part of the Health 2.0 Developer Challenge.
Teams invited to participate include:
Judges include:
Health 2.0 101
By: Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0
New to Health 2.0? Confused about what this Web 2.0 stuff is and what it’s got to do with healthcare? Don’t understand “unplatforms”? Can’t identify a data utility layer? Want a refresher on the 4 stages of Health 2.0? Want to know what happened to “user-generated healthcare”?
Matthew & Indu will give a version of the longer keynote addresses they give to audiences outside of Health 2.0 conferences to catch you up!
Afternoon Break
The Opening Night Curtain Raiser
Hosted by: Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya, Health 2.0
Indu & Matthew will kick off the conference by introducing the three themes of:
You’ll get a taste of the topics and the demos to come, but we’ll start on the conversation and the controversy with several key players, and introduce a couple of “timely” issues.
And in a first for Health 2.0 we’re going to do this in a series of Fireside Chats using a chain of interviewers and interviewees:
Food/Prevention
New Data Models
Pregnancy and Health 2.0
Opening Night Party
Immediately outside the main conference room, in the foyer, where we’ll be feasting and mingling Health 2.0-style.
Tuesday, March 22, 2010
Morning Introduction
Wellness 2.0, Prevention, Exercise & Food
Moderated by: Alan Greene Founder, DrGreene.com
With a Keynote from:
One area where Health 2.0 technologies show great promise and some early market penetration is in tools for wellness. Employers, consumers, and even Medicare are now paying for programs and services that don’t look like traditional medical care, but may have great benefits. But in a world in which the food supply, and the physical and social environment seem to be programming us for obesity, what can the Health 2.0 community do? We’ll take a closer look at how Health 2.0 tools can become part of the fabric for better micro-and macro-decisions about food and healthy behaviors, with a special focus on how we can make a real contribution to ending childhood obesity.
Speakers:
With Demos from and Discussion with:
Break and Sponsored Deep Dive
The Future of Research
Moderated by: Indu Subaiya, Co-Chairman and CEO, Health 2.0
The emergence of user-generated content, and the rise of patient involvement in Health 2.0 is radically changing research in both discovery and clinical practice. It’s raising important questions. What is peer review? What is evidence? And what’s appropriate methodology in a world in which data are being generated and released from so many diverse sources so quickly? We’ll be looking across the spectrum from genomics to clinical trial recruiting all the way to clinical research and decisions made by providers and consumers in everyday practice.
Speakers:
With Demos from and Discussion with:
Lunch in the Exhibit Hall
Lunch with Calit2
don’tdeletethis
During the lunch, Dr. Koh, Mr. Park and other HHS staff will introduce the national health communication and health IT priorities for the next decade and challenge the health IT developer community to build applications that will help the Nation reach our Healthy People 2020 goals and objectives. The purpose is to share ideas about how to use these objectives to inform app development and to track and advance their impact on health.
Space is limited – so RSVP today!
The Health 2.0 Developer Challenge Showcase
Moderated by: Indu Subaiya, Co-Chairman and CEO, Health 2.0
See winners from both the online Health 2.0 Developer Challenge and the most recent Health 2.0 code-a-thons.
With speakers including:
And announcing the winners of the:
Afternoon Break
Making Health Care Cheaper
Moderated by: Matthew Holt, Co-Chairman, Health 2.0
Inspired by a keynote we heard some time back from Mark Smith at California Health Care Foundation and by the work of organizations such as West Wireless Health Institute, we’re going to push the envelope on how Health 2.0 technologies and the companies using them can actually lower the cost of health care. We’ll be showing new models for care delivery, new Health 2.0 technologies that reduce costs, and new technology models that take advantage of lightweight tools and rapid cycles for development and deployment. We will also address alternate funding models that are tailored for a lower cost, faster and more iterative approach in health technology innovation.
Speakers:
With Demos from and Conversation with:
How are We Going to Make a Difference?
Moderated by: Jane Sarasohn-Kahn Principal, Think-Health
For more than a day the discussion has been about how health care can be cheaper, how Health 2.0 can advance research, and what to do about our national (and international crisis) with lifestyle induced disease. In the final session, some key players will discuss their vision for the future of health care, and the role Health 2.0 will play.
Panelists:
Closing Remarks
Sparkling water & healthy hors d’oeuvres (plus some cocktails too!)