Archive for the 'healthcare' Category

16
Mar
12

Healthcare Advertising: CDC Creates Dramatic Ads for Stop Smoking Campaign

The Federal Government and Centers for Disease Control just launched a new and graphic, $54 million dollar advertising campaign to curtail smoking. It is targeted to young people and the images are disturbing.

Will it work? Advertising that is shocking can be very effective if it grabs the audience, but can also backfire if the target market puts up defensive mechanisms and responds with the “it wont happen to me,” attitude.

What do you think? Will the ads hit home with a younger population? Will the ads get kids to quit smoking or avoid smoking to being with? What do you think about the new advertising campaign? Let us know your thoughts!

06
Dec
11

Find Blood via Facebook

Most treatments depend on blood. And finding a matching donor can be a problem for many hospitals and clinics around the world.

Now in India, a project called SocialBlood.org is saving lives. The Facebook-powered campaign encourages blood donations and enables potential donors and recipients to make contact with one another through the online forum.

Social Blood connects people who has same blood type. Choose your blood type from the website and join the Facebook group. It’s that easy. After you become a  member of your blood type group, you can invite your friends, post a message in emergency or respond to requests for blood donations.

“A recent post from a man asking for blood for his daughter received 74 responses in 24 hours,” said 22-year-old Social Blood Founder Karthik Naralasetty.

This simple idea of connecting via Facebook is taking social media to the next level. Could your health organization benefit from a similar campaign?

Let us know what you think about Social Blood, we would love to hear your feedback and comments here on The Side Note, or via Twitter @Weise_Ideas or on Facebook.

30
Nov
11

Fit 2 Fat 2 Fit

There are many diets and many work out programs today. People are always trying to find the best way to be healthy. At times trying to whip yourself into shape can seem impossible. Drew Manning is a personal trainer from Utah and he is going the extra mile to show that you can lose those pesky pounds and eat right. In May he started an unprecedented journey that has gotten worldwide attention. He was tired of hearing that he didn’t know what it was like to be overweight or unhealthy. So, he decided to start the journey of fit to fat to fit. He quit exercising and quit following his strict diet. He started eating without restriction and even let people choose meals they wanted to see him eat. After six months of an unrestricted diet and gaining more than 70 pounds, he has started his journey back to fit. Manning appeared on The Jay Leno Show and Dr. Oz where he shared his experience of exercising and breaking his new addiction to Zingers and Mountain Dew.

Manning has taken the phrase “lead by example” to heart. Rather than sitting on the sidelines coaching people about fitness, he is on the front lines showing them by example that it can be done. He is demonstrating an excellent way to communicate. People can understand more when they are shown rather than told what to do. People of all professions can learn a thing or two about Manning’s message.

I for one am looking forward to seeing him accomplish this goal and see the many people he will inspire. You can follow his journey at http://www.fit2fat2fit.com/.

P.S. Thanks to our long distance intern Jeff Larsen for this post.

20
Sep
11

Top Ten Things We Learned at SHSMD2011

Attendees of SHSMD2011 are all dealing with re-entry work, attempting to sync their Poken and evaluating to-do lists based on the SHSMD conference. While everyone will have their personal take-aways, Jay Weise and I developed a top ten list of things we heard and learned in Phoenix.

1. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act includes provisions about IRS oversight of requirements that nonprofit healthcare providers must meet in order to maintain their tax-exempt status. Nonprofit organizations are seeking assistance to track community benefit programs and keep it in a format approved by the IRS. This is an opportunity for the right company.

2. HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) is a national survey that asks patients about their experiences during a recent hospital stay.  When will the general public adopt HCAHPS as criteria they use to select a hospital? Unfortunately, there is a lot of focus by hospital administration on these scores, but no evidence that a patient is using it in the hospital selection process.

3. The new buzzword, ‘Patient Experience’ Not patient-centered, not patient-centric, not patient-focused…Patient Experience.  This is intended to represent the totality of the interactions and perceptions of interactions between the patient and the health care facility. Patients with a more favorable experience are more likely to adhere to treatment protocol, have a positive outcome and provide favorable recommendations to others.

4. A big question from the conference: is government mandated health care constitutional? When will a ruling that provides certainty occur? How much legislative change will occur to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act prior to the large provisions taking effect in 2014?

5. From Michael Sachs’ keynote presentation on Friday, Constitutionality ruling on healthcare reform will not affect the macro trends in the healthcare industry.

6. Hospitals are waiting for someone to figure out a strategy for Accredited Care Organizations (ACO’s) before they adopt it. Right now there is too much uncertainty and confusion. ACO’s are too far away from current Key Performance Indicators.

7. From Jeff Bauer’s keynote presentation on Saturday, “By 2020, there will be more people living in the United States under 18 that were born outside the U.S. than were born inside the U.S.” The impact on medical treatments will be far-reaching. For example, men of Korean descent do not have the genetic enzyme to process the anti-depression drug, serotonin. How will this effect care, drug protocols, pharmaceutical company focus and online information?

8. Marketing strategist in healthcare organizations are the only people in the organization that can bring the customers point of view to strategy. Hospital Administrators are counting on the marketing strategist voice. Marketers need to speak up.

9. Healthcare marketers must consider the system of care is not inside the hospital walls, it is outside of it. Healthcare marketing strategists must take the leadership position and consider all entry points including: the website, community events, referral lines, physician offices, etc.

10. Integration across multiple platforms of data and across functional areas within a medical facility must occur to provide value to patients. The cost-efficiencies will be mandated in health care reform and are essential in a competitive environment.

Maybe we should have called this a top fourteen list because we have to include some of our favorite quotes:

“Patients fear rude doctors and nurses more than death.” – Colleen Sweeney, Director of Innovation, Ambassador, and Customer Services,
Memorial Health System, South Bend, IN

“HIPAA is the mullet of patient safety, your data is not as protected as you think.” – David McDonald, CEO, True North Custom Media, Chattanooga, TN

“Be realistic when setting Facebook goals for any hospital. Who really wants to LIKE a hospital?” – Dean Browell, Executive Vice President, Feedback, Richmond, VA

“The FDA has rejected many new cancer drugs because they were tested on the wrong kinds of cancer.” – Jeffrey C. (Jeff) Bauer, Ph.D. Health Futurist and Medical Economist, Chicago, IL

Want to find out more about what we learned at SHSMD 2011? Give us a call. Want to add to this list, share your thoughts here or on Facebook at Weise Communications and follow us on Twitter at @Weise_Ideas.

17
Aug
11

Can Mobile Technology Help Create a Better Health Care System?

Mobile technology could help reform health care and change the way illness is treated all over the world.

One of the most important things is how mobile applications could change the health care systems focus on reactive care and treatment to preventative strategies. If health care could focus on prevention, then less time would be spent on immediate treatment in hospitals and doctors’ offices, cutting costs of health care significantly. This is especially important for developing nations, given the ratio of doctors to patients is significantly lower than that of developed nations.

Along with a more preventative approach, mobile technology could help distribute the responsibilities. Allowing people to have help at there figure tips and not have to run the nearest hospital.

Four tips to begin mobile technology focused health care are:

  1. Getting Comfortable with Non-Clinical Sources
    Patients sharing with patients could be a huge untapped community. While doctors and nurses may not feel it is appropriate to share due to potential privacy violations, patients could share with each other.
  2. Build Tools to Support
    Create tools to remind patients of vaccinations dates, appointments, or preventative visits. Build this into your practice now
  3. Find Systems that are Working to Support People, then Build on Them
  4. Start Small and Learn Your Way to the Right Solutions Through a Deep Understanding of Patient and User Context

The biggest hurtle for mobile health care technology is existing regulatory and reimbursement structures in place, especially in the U.S. It may take a while for mobile health care to take off, but being ready for adopting is key since it may be one of the greatest outlets for improving patient care and costs.

How do you think mobile technology will impact health care? We’d love to hear from you.

10
Aug
11

Seven Tips for Health Care Companies on Facebook

Social media is one of the biggest marketing tools for companies all over the world. While many companies have found success in this tool, the health care industry has taken a slower and more cautious approach to using social media. Facebook, the biggest social media platform out there, is a great place to start and a great learning tool if you are new to the social media experience. Mashable created a Facebook Marketing Series that includes lots of great tips and advice to get started. We have taken the 8 Tips for Health Care and Pharmaceutical Companies’ on Facebook and reworked them to reflect our experiences. Below are seven Tips for Health Care Companies on Facebook.

 

Tip 1: Is Your Product Consumer-Facing
Are consumers your target? If so, consumers love to research products online, so having a great Facebook page would be appropriate. On the other hand, if you are marketing to physicians, they do not discuss work on Facebook so it may not be the appropriate.

Tip 2: Provide Useful Information
The whole purpose of Facebook is the socialize, so don’t try to bombard consumers with things they are not going to do, such as asking them to follow several steps or share private information. On Facebook, just be helpful, provide your patients with the information they want to obtain and do not ask much more.

Tip 3: Ask Intelligent and Related Questions
Ask and listen to your consumers, if they are giving your site a chance, then they may be willing to participate.

Tip 4: Have Real Experts Lead Discussions
This is a no brainer; consumers want to speak with people who know the facts. So, if you are using PR or marketing to lead your social media content, make sure they know the facts as well as your experts, and have the experts readily accessible to help answer any questions that PR and marketing cannot.

Tip 5: Create a Publishing Schedule
Create a content schedule of relevant information and questions that can be delivered through your Facebook page. You need to stay relevant with Facebook users and the only way to do this is to continuously put up new content and questions to keep users engaged.

Tip 6: Establish the Right Success Metrics
Make sure you are not just using the “like” button or your number of fans to rate the success of your Facebook page. You also need to be looking at the number of conversations, the number of repeat visits, and pages viewed per visit.

Tip 7:  Make a Social Media Commitment
You need to create a community for your consumers to participate. Continue to grow and feed your community.

With these tips and helpful hints, Facebook should be an easy way to start using social media. It is time for the health care industry to get more involved in this marketing tool and to start using it to benefit consumers and companies alike.

01
Jul
11

Better Health Care Communications: Tracking Disease Through Social Networks

Social networks allow users to share their entire lives with those around them and actively engage with the world at large. Status changes and twitter feeds are continuously bustling with news of pending engagements, birthday celebrations and even illness. Individuals, companies and professionals from all verticals of life consult these networks for the latest news, gossip and information. Recently, epidemiologists have begun taking special notice of social networks as a new tool to help track and monitor the spread of infectious disease within society.

Social media is changing the tactics of the scientific health community and how they discover and track the spread of disease. These tools such as Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare are now used in coordination with traditional methods of tracking to produce faster results. In monitoring social networks by region, widespread illness can be detected quickly and this knowledge could potentially prevent a pandemic.

According to a recent article by the New York Times, “A growing cadre of epidemiologists sees social media as a boon. Future hunts for pathogens may rely as heavily on Twitter streams and odd clusters of search queries as on blood tests and personal histories.”

In recent years, these scientists have studied patterns of illness through online searches and have identified regional spikes illnesses like the flu. Thanks to social media, they have made predictions a week or more in advance of those scientists who strictly consult traditional forms of disease tracking.

The use of unconventional data sources continues to increase. It can be predicted that more tools and applications will emerge to help in this research. One such tool is already in use. HealthMap is “An ambitious website and mobile application that constantly trolls the Internet for emerging outbreaks of the flu or a new respiratory illness.” HealthMap is an outstanding breakthrough for the medical community.  “Researchers recently used HealthMap to illustrate on a world map the location of new cases of E. coli infections as they were identified, following a massive illness outbreak that was eventually linked to German sprouts.”

Contagious diseases spread extremely easily and quickly within society, social networking tools allow for disease surveillance to be just as instantaneous.

To share with us your thoughts on how social media is transforming epistemology or other socially based research efforts, contact us on Facebook at Weise Communications and follow @Weise_Ideas on Twitter.

28
Jun
11

Franchise Health Care Companies: Top 10 Reasons

The following blog was originally posted at franchisinghealthcare.com. Weise Communications is proud to be a sponsor of the Franchising in Health Care Conference, July 27 & 28, in Minneapolis. For more information about the conference, or to register, click here.

According to an article originally posted in the Denver Business Journal entitled “Urgent care franchises gaining acceptance,” companies such as Maryland-based Doctors Express, have seen great growth based on a productive business model for both the franchisees and the patients. In the article Chris Prior, medical director at Doctors Express in Centennial Colorado states, “declining number of primary care physicians has made it harder for a parent to get their child in to see their family doctor when illness arises, making new urgent-care locations more accessible.”

A health care franchise has the ability to positively impact the community it serves by reducing the cost of health care expenses and improving overall community wellness. Franchising within the health arena is advantageous because it allows for increased buying power of equipment, supplies and technology solutions. For example, when a new treatment becomes available, the franchisor can a directly share information with the medical professionals (within the franchise system) to detail implementation. This buying power will also mean franchisees in a system can purchase new technology at a bulk rate – something stand-alone practitioners will not be able to do. The knowledge-share and buying power will effectively and quickly spread a high standard of treatment options across a system and throughout communities.

The following are our top 10 reasons to franchise great health care concepts:

  1. Multiple locations with cost-effective services improve/increase patient access to care.
  2. Replicating systems throughout the franchise such as advertising programs, patient acquisition plans and technology infrastructure, reduces costs.
  3. Franchisees have access to buying power for costly medical equipment and supplies.
  4. The franchise system provides more sophisticated business management and allows medical professionals to focus on practicing medicine.
  5. The ability to purchase and implementation of technology speeds up, increases and improves the business.
  6. Services can better coordinate for an individual patient.
  7. The larger system can monitor best practices, which allows for better patient outcomes and more positive customer experiences.
  8. Franchising allows for faster scalability of a great concept.
  9. A franchise system is better for raising capital when overall system improvements are needed.
  10. Effective franchising may bend the cost curve of health care within communities, thereby improving the overall health and wellness of a community.

Have an additional top reason to franchise in the health care space? Please feel free to post your ideas in the comments; we would appreciate hearing from you. Be sure to follow us online @Weise_Ideas orFacebook: Weise Communications

I would like to express great thanks to Kevin Hein for helping with this post. Kevin Hein is a partner at Faegre & Benson. He is a corporate lawyer with a special emphasis on representing companies using franchising as a method of distributing their products or services.

21
Jun
11

5 Ways to Get the Media to Pick Up Your Story – Part 1 of 3

Please welcome guest blogger, healthcare communications professional Rachel Brand who will bring The Side Note a series of three blogs for the next three weeks on health care public relations.

Do you want to write more compelling press releases and earn more coverage?

You should. Health care is ripe with dramatic medical rescues, fascinating technology, unsung heroes and stirring ethical debates. But these stories often don’t get told. That’s because pr pros are writing leads like this:

IMPORTANT RESOURCES FOR INSURANCE AGENTS, BROKERS, HEALTH-RELATED ORGANIZATIONS AND COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS

The new health insurance plan, authorized by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, is designed to provide coverage to uninsured individuals who have been denied health insurance or been offered only unaffordable options.

Sure, it’s important. But is it interesting? And – will it drive coverage?

1. Lead with the impact

For your next lede, ask yourself out loud, “what does it mean to the man in the green pick-up truck?” You can see him, across the park under the tree, sitting in his rusty forest green truck.

In other words, how does your news benefit, effect or change the lives of real people?

How about:

Thousands of uninsured Americans, desperate for healthcare coverage because they are chronically ill, can now see a doctor thanks to a new federally funded health insurance plan.

But what if your program doesn’t have any direct impact on people, at least not yet? Then…

2. Lead with people

Whether you are promoting a walk to fight cancer, a rally for homelessness, or the appointment of new CEO of your hospital, find a person and tell his or her story. Better, yet, tell the story of an important person in an unusual way.

Typical CEO appointment releases have headlines/first paragraphs like this:

LARRY LEADER APPOINTED CEO OF ST. ELIZABETH’S REGIONAL HOSPITAL

(Anytown, USA) Lawrence Leader, currently the COO of St. Elizabeth’s Regional Hospital, has been appointed CEO of the hospital. He takes over as current CEO Marcy Mercy retires after a long and distinguished career.

But what if you took a half hour to find out Larry’s story?

The results might be:

MEDIC, HOSPITAL PORTER, NOW CEO – ST. ELIZABETH’S NEW CEO HAS SEEN HEALTHCARE FROM THE BOTTOM UP

(Anytown, USA) Larry Leader’s mother, a first-grade schoolteacher in Moline, IL, used to count out coins from her wallet each Saturday morning before grocery shopping. Rarely was there extra to buy candy.

Poor but strong-willed Florence Leader pushed her children to go to college. Larry, the youngest of five, enrolled as an Army medic to pay for it. …

The moral of the story? Writing a compelling press release that leads with the impact or leads with people is a better way to get the media to notice your press release.

(Continued next week)

Rachel Brand is a healthcare communications professional who can teach writing over brown bag lunches at your company. Contact her at rachel (at) brandcommunicationsllc.com.


16
Jun
11

Health Care Marketing: Taking the Social Media Hippocratic Oath

Three key tips for physician-based social media

All physicians have a stake in their public perception; overlooking or minimizing the impact of social media in maintaining that presence is a recipe for disaster. With HIPAA regulations to consider, physicians are in a unique situation regarding their online persona. Here are a few tips designed to help physicians maintain a professional online presence and preserve the integrity of their relationship with patients. These tips are consistent with the American Medical Association social media policy released in November that highlight some of the things physicians should consider when focusing on their online presence.

Regularly monitor privacy settingsFacebook recently came under extreme scrutiny for unleashing face recognition software that provides identity suggestions for tagging people in photographs. A Los Angeles Times story describes the concerns which are part privacy and part the decision of Facebook to release the facial-recognition feature as an ‘opt-out’ feature. Massachusetts Rep. Edward J. Markey, co-chairman of the Congressional Privacy Caucus expressed his frustration, “Requiring users to disable this feature after they’ve already been included by Facebook is no substitute for an opt-in process.”  The only way to disable the feature is to update privacy settings.

Positioning information from a qualified source – The public needs information from the health care community. Providing information from a trusted, qualified health care professional will balance the misinformation gathered from outside sources including the Internet. The best way to do that is to be informative about medical conditions, research, and treatment options in general terms. It is much better to say ‘Adults with the ____ syndrome typically display ____ symptoms, ’ than it is to say, ‘I saw a patient today with _____ syndrome and he/she displayed ____symptoms.’ Even inadvertent disclosure of patient’s health information can be a violation of HIPAA.

Maintain separate personal and professional social media accounts – This tactic has the benefit of allowing for more candor in a personal account and information sharing that is more relevant to that specific account. The professional account will have more work-related messages, inquiries and information. One of the challenges is managing multiple accounts. The solution is to use a social media tool like TweetDeck or HootSuite. Just be sure you know which account you are using to send information at all times.

Most importantly, recognize that online actions and posted content can negatively affect physicians’ reputations and may have career consequences.

Tell us if you’ve implemented policies to guide physicians in their online reputation. Share your thoughts with us on Facebook at Weise Communications and follow us on Twitter at @Weise_Ideas.




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