Saturday, July 17, 2010

Inception Theatrical Review,Inception Synopsis, Should I Watch Inception?| FlickDirect

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Inception Theatrical Review

Marco Duran
7/17/2010 9:17 AM EST

Inception Theatrical Review I did not intend to write a review for Inception.  I didn't want to.  If I plan on writing about a film, I take my notebook and write my notes by glow of the silver screen.  However, when I entered the midnight showing, I went empty handed.  I just wanted to sit back and enjoy the ride.  The lights dimmed; the film played; the curtain closed and something was planted in my head that has since festered and grown, taking over my dreams and my waking mind.  I was compelled to write on what I saw and experienced.  I sit here now, needing to share what I experienced, needing to tell as many as I can to run and have the same experience I did.  A film has not haunted me so much in quite a while.  It is the second of Nolan's films to make me question reality and have me chattering like a gibbon as I left the theater - Memento was the first.  They both messed with my head.  Inception is so well tuned, so well structured, the world it creates is complete and nearly perfect.  I not only understood, but I could easily manipulate the concepts it showed me so that I could see them every day around me.  This is what film is about.

At some undetermined time in the future (or maybe happening now in the present right under our noses) people are able to jack into other's subconscious and invade their dreams.  Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) is the best at doing this and at finding the secrets hidden within those dreams.  He is hired by Saito (Ken Watanabe) to place an idea into his business rival's, Robert Fischer (Cillian Murphy), mind.  The request is impossible, the stakes, high, but Cobb needs to do it to gain access back into the United States in order to see his children again. A heist. One last job.  So, Cobb puts together a team of people to help him accomplish this task.  Ariadne (Ellen Page) is the architect; Yusuf (Dileep Rao) specializes in sleeping potions; Eames (Tom Hardy - stealing every scene he is in) has connections and munitions and Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is Cobb's right hand man.  However, what none of them realize is that Cobb has a demon in his head in the form of his ex-wife, Mal (Marion Cotillard) that may materialize and wreak havoc while they are working.

The first person that must be praised is writer/director Christopher Nolan.  He has proven himself time and again to be the best director working today.  Is there any other director whose track record is so clean?  He makes films that are great for film geeks and casual filmgoers alike.  The critics love him with great reviews and the audiences love him with great box-office.  Besides the misstep that is Insomnia, I am hard pressed to think of anyone else who is so prolific and still so successful.  Some will say Tarantino but I would argue that Nolan has broader appeal.  I really don't know why more isn't being said and written about him.  He is a master storyteller.  No one else would have been able to cram so much information, at such breakneck speed, into two and a half hours without confusing me, and keep me on the edge of my seat.  Each piece of information is given at such a time that it either connects to what happened not so long ago, or so that we can use it to unlock the mystery that is about to come.  Other directors would have had pity on the "incompetence" of the audience; they would have watered down the plot to help us understand all the information.  Nolan drops us in the middle of a story and trusts us to keep up.  He doesn't bother with details that would weigh down the exposition (How can they jack into other people's dreams?, Who discovered it?, How does it work?) but instead offers it up for us to buy into if we are to follow him. 

The editing is the second thing that must be praised.  The editing room is the final place that a director "writes", and as such Nolan's cutter, Lee Smith, (the one he's been working with since Batman Begins) is a genius.  For thirty to forty-five minutes in the second act of this film there are between four and six different storylines that are going on simultaneously and interrelate with each other.  The deft work done here is like juggling chainsaws.  If one of the storylines is botched and left behind, the whole movie is ruined.  And someone may lose a limb.  Added to that is the unbelievable score that Hans Zimmer, three-time Nolan collaborator, produces.  It is as unrelenting as the editing.  Looking back, I don't recall more then five minutes tops that did not have music behind it, pushing it forward, raising the tension.  There are a few spots in the film where I wished the movie would have slowed down some in order to let us feel the weight of an issue or a decision, and therefore I feel it lost something special in those moments.  However, on the whole, it is a dizzying display of expert editing.

DiCaprio does better here then he has done in quite a while, perhaps because he's not butchering some accent.  His guilt ridden scientist is very similar in tone to the guilt ridden cop he played in Shutter Island.  He is perfect in this role.  After discovering Tom Hardy in 2008's Bronson, I have found every role he's been in mesmerizing.  I'm glad he's going to be getting a chance soon to be a leading man, I just wish it wasn't as Mad Max.  Joseph Gordon-Levitt keeps choosing amazing material to be in, although I do wish the costume crew didn't always place him in the same dapper-looking clothes – shirt and tie with a cardigan again?  Switch it up a bit, huh?  And Marion Cotillard is an unrelenting force here.  The inside joke of having the music that wakes everyone up be Edith Piaf (Cotillard's Oscar winning role) was, I feel, inspired.  Through it all, nothing was regretted by these dreamweavers.

Finally I want to discuss a scene that was in the trailer – guys floating around a hotel hallway.  For some of it, I am still confused as to how they did it.  There are two segments to the scene.  The first is the fight, a fight that goes from floor to wall to ceiling to wall to floor with such ease and fluidity that even Fred Astaire, in all his dancing glory, couldn't have dreamed that film would have come this far.  That was incredible and I can't even imagine how the fight choreographer wrapped his brain around the logistics of bringing that all together.  The second is the zero gravity portion, long profound stretches of time where lots of people are suspended in zero gravity.  That's where I get confused.  I suppose it could be CG, erase the wires that the actors are hanging from, however it appeared to me to be more of what they did for the Apollo 13 film in NASA's KC-135 reduced gravity aircraft.  But how would they have been able to build an entire hotel hallway, room and elevator into one of those aircrafts?  It cooks my noodle, but I love it for doing so.

There are a couple of places where the visuals don't quite work, where the CG lets the filmmakers down.  There is a bit more of The Matrix (people being jacked in, not knowing which is the real reality, heck they even had a hot girl that was a complete fabrication of someone's imagination) and of Vanilla Sky here then I would have liked to see.  And though the ideas may not be completely original, the execution is.  How you react to the ending and your interpretation of the entire film is more a reflection of your personality and your outlook on life.  It's awesome for a piece of art to mean so many different things to so many different people.  Nolan has given us yet another a film that we will be watching for decades to come.  

-- Marco Duran

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Go see Inception. It will play with your mind. It is an incredible movie.

Posted via email from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Monday, May 10, 2010

The video (http://bit.ly/hcrduintro) is up for #hcrdu (@healthcampRDU) on May 13-14

This weekend  I have been busy editing videos for the upcoming HealthCampRDU that takes place in Durham, NC on May 14th. The few remaining tickets are available at http://healthcamprdu.eventbrite.com

The intro for HealthCampRDU is here:

You can share it with friends via the short url http://bit.ly/hcrduintro

The other video I have been working on for HealthCamp is the fight Disassociated Patient Syndrome (fightDPS) video. Check it out here: http://bit.ly/fightDPS

 

Posted via web from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Apple Change Quietly Makes iPhone, iPad Into Web Phones | Gadget Lab

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Apple updated the iPhone software development kit on Wednesday to allow internet telephony apps to work on the 3G network. The little-noticed move effectively unlocks the ability for the iPhone — and the upcoming iPad — to be used as web phones.

ICall, a voice-over-Internet Protocol (VOIP) calling company, said the latest revisions in Apple’s iPhone developer agreement and software development kit enable the iPhone to make phone calls over 3G data networks. ICall promptly released an update to its app today, adding the 3G support.

Because the iPad includes a microphone and will run iPhone apps, that means the tablet will gain internet telephony, too.

The FCC on Thursday issued a statement applauding Apple’s policy change.

“I commend Apple’s decision to open its platform to 3G calling, an action that will create new opportunities for entrepreneurs and provide more choices for consumers,” said FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski.

Previously, Apple’s policy had prohibited VOIP functionality on 3G networks — Skype, for example, was crippled so that its voice calling capabilities would only work over a Wi-Fi connection. The only way to use VOIP iPhone apps over 3G was by hacking (i.e., jailbreaking) the device.

Apple and AT&T had a secret agreement to ban apps that would let iPhone users make phone calls using the 3G data connection to prevent cutting into AT&T’s profits. That agreement was revealed in summer of 2009 when the FCC asked Apple and AT&T to explain why Google’s Voice app was rejected from the iPhone store.

After the FCC announced it was planning to extend internet openness rules to mobile networks, AT&T in October 2009 announced it would extend VOIP to 3G networks for the iPhone.

It appears that AT&T’s policy change is only now coming into effect, beginning with iCall and a few other VOIP apps that can now work with 3G.

At the same time, however, Apple has put in a roadblock to true 3G openness, because most phones’ SIM cards won’t fit in the iPad’s unusual micro SIM slot.

“I applaud Apple’s decision to allow iCall to extend its functionality beyond Wi-Fi and onto the 3G networks,” iCall said in a press statement. “This heralds a new era for VOIP applications on mobile platforms, especially for iCall and our free calling model. I hope that now more developers will begin using our VOIP as a platform to integrate VOIP into their applications.”

Though VOIP services offer cheaper calling plans to consumers, Tero Kuittinen, an MKM Partners telecom analyst, said the impact of VOIP on the telecom market won’t be immediate. He noted current VOIP technologies suffer from poor voice quality compared to traditional cellular calls, and with the current state of network congestion, it’s not going to get much better anytime soon.

“There’s a handful of kids who have always wanted to just make their voice calls on VOIP, but regular consumers have not been very excited about it,” Kuittinen said. “With voice over IP over 3G, the quality isn’t going to be there for quite some time.”

He added that VOIP will probably be much more popular when telecom companies roll out their faster fourth-generation networks, dubbed Long Term Evolution.

The move won’t necessarily change things for the famously rejected Google Voice app for the iPhone. Google Voice lets users channel all their calls through a single Google Voice number, which offers cheap international calls, free long-distance calls, free text messaging and voicemail transcription.

Google Voice is not a VOIP service. The calls are placed on a cell connection and use the minutes on a mobile phone. Circumventing Apple’s blockade, Google recently released a web-based version of Google Voice, which can be accessed through the iPhone browser. But that web-based version of Google Voice still depends on the iPhone’s telephone app to actually place the calls.

Google did not have an announcement regarding Google Voice in light of Apple’s new policy.

“We haven’t heard any updates regarding our native app for the iPhone,” a Google spokeswoman said.

Many have speculated that Apple would not allow Google Voice in its App Store to protect its partner AT&T’s profits. When asked why Google Voice was rejected, AT&T said it had no part in the decision, and Apple said it had not rejected the app and was still examining it.

Apple has been considering the Google Voice app since at least July 2009.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

See Also:

iCall Download Link [iTunes]

Apple needs to make one other change in their SDK. They need to enable background apps. If the VOIP app is running you won't be able to do anything else (unless Apple is implementing dashboard widgets) that can be accessed while another app is running.

Without background apps the iPad becomes no better than a Verizon smartphone while you are talking on the phone.

Posted via web from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

AppleInsider | Apple seen extending exclusive iPhone deal with AT&T

Apple's choice of AT&T as the exclusive US carrier for the iPad is less a reflection of the AT&T network and more a recognition of the strength of GSM internationally. Apple gains by simplifying production by supporting 3G GSM network topologies. If Apple doesn't want to produce a custom iPad for the US market it's choice is limited to one carrier - AT&T. Verizon and Sprint use CDMA and PCS technologies and T-Mobile uses a different GSM spectrum.

Until Apple gets a dual CDMA/GSM chipset, or the USA goes with LTE across the board AT&T is realistically the only game in town for Apple.

Posted via web from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Sunday, February 07, 2010

The Health Care Blog: The point of Health 2.0. Yes there is one

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February 06, 2010

The point of Health 2.0. Yes there is one

By Matthew Holt

The (not huge) world of Health 2.0, participatory medicine and ePatients has been fretting itself about a comment Susannah Fox (all hail) elevated into a post called “What’s the Point of Health 2.0”.

Here’s an excerpt from the comment from DarthMed,

The remaining 95% of “patients” out there are not motivated to become informed, or invest the time/energy/money in using any of these tools. These are the folks that know that fast food isn’t healthy, but are just too tired to choose differently. Some (emphasis on some) will do a standard google search when they receive a new diagnosis at best. Yet these are the folks – often folks with multiple chronic (often preventable) health problems, many overweight, on multiple medications, sometimes social problems – that have the real issue that needs fixing.

So we can all sit and perfect the tools for a few folks that never needed them anyway, or we can recognize that the kinds of solutions required for healthcare in the US today have nothing to do with fancy IT, or prioritization on search engines, and everything to do with low-tech, unsexy approaches toward grass-roots public health. Sorry to be the voice of reality guys.

and here’s (an excerpt) from another DarthMed made on Fard Jonmar’s blog.

Today we are looking at millions being pumped into health-app start-ups, none of them profitable (or nearly profitable). Billions being pumped into linking electronic health records that ePatientDave showed us can be quite inaccurate anyway (given his GHealth uploading experience, albeit with claims data). So, after a few billion dollars of public and private investment we will have some iPhone apps that “self-informers” will use, a few “vibrant” patient communities of 10,000 patients with only 1,000 patients active (does anyone hear the sound of “disruption” here?), and a vaguely interconnected network of health information space junk.

OR, we legislate that patients should be entitled to receive within 24 hours of demand a one page health summary from their doctor + a copy of test results that they ordered and scripts that they wrote in the past 12 months, and leave it up to the clinics to work out how they deliver on it. Period. Then, lets use the billions left over, and our passion to do more diabetes screens in schools, factories; more mammograms; more childcare for teenage moms so they can go to school/college; more after-school activities to promote fitness and wellbeing at an age where behavior modification can make a big difference.

Unfortunately most Health 2.0 debate revolves around defending new technologies as the solution. And in the process, we’re missing the main point that many preventable social and health problems are just festering away. When technologies are the answer, they take off by themselves (case in point, Google Maps vs Google Health). And I’m sorry, but the HIT horse has been whipped and crying, trying, dying for years.

I'm a little baffled by both of darthmed's comments.

Yeah, it's hard to change behavior. Yeah, it's a good thing to have more preventative and primary care.

But Health 2.0 communities and tools are clearly helping patients and saving lives here and abroad. And there's oodles of research from Kate Lorig/David Sobel and lots of others that online (and offline) support groups help patients achieve better outcomes at lower costs.

So is the complaint that spending on building Health 2.0 technologies is crowding out spending that should go to preventative care?

I think that's the point of Darthmed's comment on Fard's piece. If so, that's totally laughable. Maybe, maybe (even counting Revolutions big dump) a total of $1.5 billion has been spent in recent years building Health 2.0 technologies. We spend $250 Billion a year on cardiac treatments that have very dubious efficacy. Americans spend $5 billion a year on supplements that don't do anything (according to most scientists). We spend $14 billion a year on a single drug (Lipitor) that many people say is harmful and overprescribed, let alone has sufficient evidence of doing what it says it does (reduce death from cardiovascular disease)

The first Darthmed comment is more crucial. Are we building tools for just already engaged patients? My answer would be that the tools allow patients who had the potential and latent desire to be engaged get involved very easily.  And it’s just not true that patients using Health 2.0 tools/communities would be equally engaged without them. So whether it’s 5% of people or 30%, it’s a real impact for them. Clearly we don't have all levels of patients as engaged as some of us might like--but more Health 2.0 technologies will be developed to bridge that gap. And if we don't get to everyone, so what? We'll get to more people and do more good than giving up.

Weightwatchers has had success showing that easy tools plus communities can lead to behavior change. That's exactly what Health 2.0 does (combine tools and community support). And yes there are still obese people. That's life--not everything will work 100%. But Health 2.0 content and communities are clearly being used by millions of people, and I believe that tools/data part is going to follow along.

But I'm most puzzled by darthmed's claim that instead of Health 2.0 we should just "legislate that patients should be entitled to receive within 24 hours of demand a one page health summary from their doctor + a copy of test results that they ordered and scripts that they wrote in the past 12 months, and leave it up to the clinics to work out how they deliver on it."

Err...who does he think is behind that demand? It's the predominantly Health 2.0 crowd behind www.healthdatarights.org leading that charge. The Health 2.0 technology crowd would love that easy access to data.

How DarthMed sees that as contradictory to Health 2.0 is beyond me. And maybe it's just intellectually sloppy on DarthMed's part to talk about billions of public dollars going into linking records, and equating that with Health 2.0. The ARRA/HITECH stimulus dollars are primarily about getting physicians to use electronic clinical workflow tools, and part of that is a demand to make the data able to be presented to patients and to other facilities' systems. That's exactly what Darthmed wants (and what the Health 2.0 evangelists of whom I'm barely one) want too.

I might agree with Darthmed that instead of the modest carrot the government is offering ($44K per physician), they could use a much bigger stick (e.g. no data, no pay) to get to the same place, but in the real world of Congressional politics, that isn't going to happen.

So I'm bemused by Darthmed's demand that "Health 2.0 – prove yourself quickly or step aside" Health 2.0 is part of a much larger societal process, and it ain’t going anywhere while there are sick people and while technology evolves so that sick people and those who care about them can use it to help themselves.

And if we're really all for diabetic screening et al for the underserved (and I am) why isn't Darthmed screaming about the collapse of the health care reform bill? In that as part of his "buyout" Bernie Sanders got $14 billion increased funding for community health centers which do exactly what Darthmed is looking for. Surely the loss of that funding as health care reform dies is far worse than any "waste" on Health 2.0 technologies.

February 6, 2010 in Consumers, Health 2.0, Matthew Holt, Meaningful Use, Susannah Fox, Technology | Permalink

Comments

There is not enough bang for the buck. Furthermore, it is someone else's buck.

Posted by: MD as HELL | Feb 6, 2010 8:25:59 AM

The DarthMed fellow is 100% correct. The various Health 2.0 tools are obviously helping individuals, that are both capable and interested, in managing their health. However, just like Weight Watchers helps individuals reduce their weight, but hasn't put a dent in the obesity rates, Health 2.0 is not contributing to population health.
Basically, you are looking at individual benefits and Darth is looking at population benefits.

Regarding investment in Health 2.0 ventures, that is up to the venture capital world. Those folks are rarely motivated by benefits to populations. If the ROI is there, they will invest. If the product does good to the customer, the investment qualifies as socially responsible. This is private money and it's no different than investing in Weight Watchers.
Health 2.0 if and when it matures, will be to health care as online banking is to financial management. It will make it easier for consumers to manage their health, but just like online banking does not reduce rates of poverty and bankruptcies and debt, Health 2.0 tools will not reduce disease, obesity and other health problems.

Changing behavior requires different tools. It requires Public Health tools. They are not as fancy and as sexy as a slick Ajax powered Health 2.0 website, and there is no instant gratification. It may take a generation or two before you see any results and it must start with the children. Most adults today are the desert generation when it comes to healthy lifestyles.

Now to the data (I love the data subject). There are two kinds of data, just like there are two kinds of health interventions: individual and population.
The individual data is only valuable to the patient and his care team. That one piece of paper summary that DarthMed mentions is good enough for individual needs and the requirement to provide it will become law in a week as part of meaningful use.
The other data, the massive fluidity of all data for all patients, is useful for population management. It could be useful for a myriad of things that are beneficial to society as a whole and public health in particular. It could also prove to be a gold mine to less noble interests directly detrimental to the individual. It's going to be a very delicate balance.

Posted by: Margalit Gur-Arie | Feb 6, 2010 12:07:40 PM

It's a common analytical problem. There is high growth rate of premium and many disease. So programs like weight watchers might be effective, just that instead of decreasing obesity rate it might be slowing down the growth in obesity rate. That is construed as being ineffective which is not necessarily true.

One could empathise with Darthmed's frustration. Yet, if Health 2.0 project can break even then there is nothing wrong. Essentially, the $2.5 trillion dollar annual bill is for 15,000+ diseases. There will be no one cure for it either. It's not going to lend itself to one liner shibboleths and dogma. We all can be correct at same time.

Posted by: Vikram C | Feb 6, 2010 3:03:07 PM

The future of Health 2.0 will be decided by the market. I read on this very site regularly about unrealistic expectations of various gadgets/technologies. Moreover, it is also regularly overlooked that patients may use knowledge from newer information sources to their explicit disadvantage - for instance, patients "recognizing" their nonspecific symptoms as part of an ongoing disease process - multiple sclerosis, ALS, Lyme ... and when the crazies (e.g. chronic Lyme disease "requiring" longterm ABx treatment) or the comercially interested (e.g. neurosurgeons promoting posterior fossa decompression to "cure" headaches postulated to be from Chiari I malformation but in reality almost always chronic migraines or other primary headaches) educate the informed patients, the misinformation becomes method.

The obesity/DM 2 catastrophe is looming, or better, we (in healthcare) are already seeing the beginning flood. That needs an enormous national effort that combines campaign for cultural change (against the sedentary life style and unhealthy eating) with financial incentives, positive and negative (no more corn subsidies, subsidize fresh produce, rebate for insured loosing weight or being normal weight, promoting walkable neighborhoods etc.). Technical gadgets will be only of very limited use. And diabetes screening is a part of firefghting, not arson protection.

Posted by: rbar | Feb 6, 2010 5:10:49 PM

As long as the congress and the society are deeply divided on the the very issue of health reform, much less what form it should be in, there is unlikelihood of any progress on this front.

Posted by: docwrite | Feb 6, 2010 7:35:07 PM

Weight Watchers is a good comparison in a lot of ways. It's social; it tries to use insights into human psychology to change behavior; it shows modest average results and in a minority of users makes a major impact; it is generally not incented so only those already motivated to actively manage the condition participate; and despite the modest results it is making no appreciable impact on population health (by itself) nor should we ever expect it to.

Health 2.0 is generally about the management of chronic disease. As such, it gets to people after they are already sick, so of course it doesn't reduce the incidence of disease. Yes, it can help someone minimize the complications from a disease and thus reduce medical utilization.

It can also improve quality of life. We had a child born two months premature a couple years ago, and used Caringbridge to share the story with friends and family as it developed, and get feedback. It didn't make a difference for our newborn's health, but it did make us feel better and it was a much more efficient way to share information and make everyone feel as informed as they wanted to be. The whole extended family bonded a bit.

There is a dimension of Health 2.0 around wellness as well. Call it Wellness 2.0. I would argue that a NY Times article on Michael Pollan's latest rules for eating, which gets put on the "most emailed" list and then readers comment with their own insights can be regarded as a form of Wellness 2.0. Certainly any place online where people discuss tips on health and wellness counts, and so do tools to predict health risk, and things like tracking tools for recording pedometer or scale data.

But as others noted, we have a culture problem that overwhelms what Health 2.0 or Wellness 2.0 can provide in terms of health outcomes. These new tools make it a little bit easier to get informed and to share information with others. Ideally, they will make it a lot easier to get informed in as much detail as you need, with actionable steps laid out for you based on the best available evidence and tailored to your personal characteristics. Genomic health is coming, and I believe Psychological health (that is, the improved use of findings on motivation, goal-achievement, barriers to change, temptation, etc.) will also get incorporated into Health 2.0 and Wellness 2.0. But even then, you need to step into the tent to see the show. And even then, there will be powerful cultural forces (mostly related to diet and lack of physical activity) that mitigate the effectiveness of these tools.

So, legislation is critical. Tax soda. Tax refined sugars and flour. Re-zone urban and suburban areas so that dense, mixed-used development is not illegal or is even encouraged (in other words, make walking-friendly cities and towns possible again). Also keep building better and stickier Health 2.0 tools, but realize their impact will be at the margins, and in the best case will be ampliative of wider social changes of attitude.

Posted by: jd | Feb 6, 2010 9:41:08 PM

First of all, I want to give credit and thanks to both Matthew and Susannah for publishing, and bringing attention to, DarthMed's comments. (To DarthMed, thanks also, but please let us know who you are. I'm really skeptical of pseudonomic commentary, and think it shouldn't be done unless the author really fears his or her comments may create personal danger. Tell us your real name, please.)

There is, in fact, something of a backlash against Health 2.0 out there, and some of the criticism is justified. This is something I think about a great deal, and therefore want to offer my own thoughts about it.

When I first came to Health 2.0 and joined ranks with folks who were leading this charge, it was because I was so thoroughly discouraged by the realm of health IT for physicians and hospitals, and disappointed with both the vendors of EHR technology and most of their customers. I saw what was happening on the consumer and patient side of health IT as leapfrogging over the tired, staid, and expensive proprietary client-server apps that were about the only thing in that marketplace. Health 2.0 was an extension of Web 2.0, which meant that it was STARTING from a point out ahead of the traditional health IT industry. Innovation was welcome, and entrepreneurs given a pat on the back. It was participatory, in the sense that the patients' rights and capabilities to engage in their own health and health care decisions was a given. And, although at times I felt that because I am a physician I was unwelcome, I understood that social groups need boundaries and you have to earn your stripes is you come in from the "outside." Hey, I even welcomed some of that suspicion, as it assured me that this was a new, vibrant, and independent place where people were put first, not professionals.

However, as I've recently written with Brian Klepper in "EHRs for a Small Planet," there is a problem with Health 2.0 just as there is a problem with the way we've approached EHR technology for doctors and hospitals.

And that is that we've been seeking solutions from IT instead of from people.

We've been too little concerned with what happens in our local communities. "Think globally, act locally," could be applied to the use of health IT by local groups as a way of re-invigorating our innate-problem solving abilities, helping one person at a time if necessary, but also building community resources for empowerment from the ground up.

What DarthMed is saying is partly true. "...(T)he kinds of solutions required for healthcare in the US today have nothing to do with fancy IT, or prioritization on search engines, and everything to do with low-tech, unsexy approaches toward grass-roots public health." Only partly true because even "low-tech, unsexy" and public health-oriented solutions to our health problems could benefit from the use of health IT, if that health IT is affordable, easy-to-use, and based on the resources people already have available to them. Instead of asking "what would be possible if everyone had the IT resources of Kaiser or Mayo, or some expensive state RHIO?" we should be asking "what is possible given the IT resources already available in the community we live in?"

There is something wonderful about the crowd on the net, but there is also something real, practical, and just as wonderful about our actual neighbors. There is something very confused and troubling going on when physicians don't know how many patients with hypertension there are in their practices, don't know how many of those patients are being treated appropriately, at what cost, and by whom else in the health system. But there is just as much wrong when a city or town council doesn't understand what the priority risks are for their community, the kinds of solutions that might address those risks, and lacks any understanding of the relationship between continuity of care among providers and the rates of dis-ease and high cost care their citizens must face.

Due to my work, I travel on airplanes a lot. I've noticed that whenever there are soldiers on the plane, the pilot makes an announcement something like this. "Folks, we have a group of fighting men and women on our plane today, and we're all very proud of the job they do defending our lives and liberties. Let's show them how much we respect them by letting them get off the plane first, and by giving them a big round of applause."

This is fine. I clap, too. But I fantasize an alternative that would go something like this. Pilot: "Ladies and gentlemen, we have a group of people on board who have lost 10 pounds of excess body weight during the last six months through eating right and exercising daily. We also have a few people on board who have successfully quit smoking cigarettes. Let's show them how proud we are of their healthy lifestyle choices by letting them get off the plane first, and offering them a big round of applause."

I clap loudly.

Kind regards, DCK

Posted by: David C. Kibbe, MD MBA | Feb 7, 2010 7:07:12 AM

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Great post from Matthew. Come on folks, we have to get past the idea that there are health solutions that will meet everyone's needs. We are heading towards a world of 10% solutions where people select from an array of potential solutions that match their needs. The problem with traditional health care and Health IT is that we have tried to design solutions that work for everyone.

Posted via web from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Thursday, January 21, 2010

@SCRIMSHIRE /THE LOW ROAD 7in Featuring Marc Rapson remix. Mark Calendars for Feb 1st

Scrimshire - The Low Road 7-Inch Release by WahWah45s Wah Wah 45s blow the doors off a new decade with a brand new release from our secret weapon, the mighty Scrimshire! Having wowed us with his lush debut album “Along Came The Devil One Night...” in 2009, the young South London g

It is time for me to do the proud Dad dance. Feb 1st sees the release of @Scrimshire's latest single, a remix. Check out the tracks via the Soundcloud link: http://soundcloud.com/wahwah45s/02-i-was-love

Posted via web from More pre-blogspot than pre-posterous

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Waiting for the concert to begin in Harrisburg

This is one instance when I wouldn't rather be skiing. This evening a birthday treat is to see the Average White Band and WAR in a double header concert. Let's rock the house!

Thanks to someone very special for this incredible treat!

Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from RatherBeSkiing