I’m just back from San Diego, where Matthew Holt’s second Health 2.0 conference finished up on Tuesday evening. Some of the things I found interesting about the conference:

  • There weren’t many doctors there. There were a few — some of them, like a brilliant young visionary named Dr. Jay Parkinson, doing remarkable things. But he was one of a handful in attendance. (Erick and Linda from PharmaSurveyor wore some cool mad-scientist lab coats at Monday’s cocktail party — but they aren’t physicians.)
  • There weren’t many big healthcare players there, either. Sure, Johnson & Johnson was a sponsor, but the vibe was a little like GM’s interest in the electric car; do they really want to help lead this movement — or just monitor and contain it? (A side note: A J&J official, addressing attendees at a cocktail party J&J sponsored, announced that alcohol is a social lubricant, “as opposed to KY, which is a different kind of lubricant.” A plug’s a plug, I guess.)
  • Even some bloggers who consider themselves experts on medical technology weren’t at this conference and didn’t want to be.

And yet, despite the sneers and snubs, I now believe more strongly than ever that Health 2.0 is the disruptive innovation that is going to turn the U.S. healthcare system on its head — and ultimately, save it from itself.

Health 2.0 will give doctors more time with patients. Health 2.0 will give patients control over their own health records. Health 2.0 will eliminate those annoying clipboard moments at the doctor’s office. Health 2.0 will make sure we don’t mix the wrong drugs. Health 2.0 will give people access to “been-there buddies” who can provide the support they need during the darkest periods of their lives. And Health 2.0 can help people to save money on prescription drugs, too. What we’ve seen so far is just the beginning.

eDrugSearch.com is proud to have been a sponsor of this conference. And we’re gratified to have received some great feedback from attendees on our site’s new community features. We’re confident the best is yet to come.

Still, we should probably at least fire the guy who wrote the eDrugSearch.com Community launch press release, because the folks at MedGadget didn’t like it.

Oh wait — I wrote that release. Nevermind.

 

3 Responses to Why Health 2.0 will do what government can’t — bring true and lasting reform to our broken healthcare system

  1. [...] the Health 2.0 way. It’s about empowering yourself. If you’re depending on the FDA to take care of [...]

  2. [...] discussion and debate helps people make better decisions. As I’ve become involved in the Health 2.0 movement, I’ve reached the much larger conclusion that this movement is going to transform the entire [...]

  3. [...] taking the wrong combination of drugs. We have written before about the promise of Web sites like Pharmasurveyor and DoublecheckMD, which help people to check the safety of their drug regimens. But making sure you are taking your [...]

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