Hodges' Model: Welcome to the QUAD: May 2021

Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...

Monday, May 31, 2021

Africa :: New Africa ii Nutrition

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"... the construction of the Armando Emilio Guebuza Bridge across the Zambezi resulted in a big fall in maize prices over a wide swath of Mozambique as it enabled farmers in the north of the country to move maize to the main centres of demand in the south."
 
single N-S road
 
Evidence that high levels of CO2 in the atmosphere actually depress the nutrient content of key crops. p.22

CLIMATE , COVID
 
food
Smallholders

security

CONFLICT

African Continental Free Trade Area

southern markets

"Past food security initiatives have even contributed to the problem by focusing too much on the production and distribution of staple foods, ... and too little on fruit, vegetables and pulses. As a result, vitamin A, iron and iodine deficiencies have all become more common." p.22. 

 

Menace of the three 'Cs', NEW AFRICAN, April/May 2021,607, p.20-21.

Small gains in malnutrition battle, NEW AFRICAN, April/May 2021,607, p.22.


Friday, May 28, 2021

Africa :: New Africa[n]

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To be completed.

Africa, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Thursday, May 27, 2021

High Intensity Networks - serenity integrated mentoring SIM model of care

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 INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES 
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SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
 group
'Serenity'
a humanising term?
TRAUMA informed?
Expressing distress
Poor coping skills
Suicidal ideation
, Plans, Intent
Self-harm
Personal Responsibility -  Serenity
Practitioner values?
Therapeutic modality
Access to Therapy - DBT ...?
Active research in this field - Parity?
Chaotic presentation
[Define] High Intensity:
Needs highly personalised care

'person-centred care'
'This' is why I became a MH Nurse:
Values
High Intensity Network# and “serenity integrated mentoring” (SIM) model of “care”
Nursing theory: 'patiency'
Integrated Recovery Programme - IRP
[Define] High Intensity:
Attempted suicide, Frequency, Nos. of services,
Nos. of A&E attendances,
Dual, n-diagnosis, Data
Evidence-base
Independent review
Mare Serenitatis:

Peace on the Moon?
Resource allocation:
Framing the problem* 'Clinically'
Language & Terminology
'High Intensity'
Education of students:
'committed' - 'completed'?
Care in the Community
(Social) Serenity
Social Justice
Community - MH Nursing - of Practice
Therapeutic relationships
Historical artefact:
The therapeutic alliance
Policing, Law & Enforcement
“high intensity users” (HIUs) of emergency services
Mental Health [Police officers] Teams

Criminalisation
Decriminalisation of Suicide 1961
(Organisational) Serenity?
High Intensity (Service-centred)
Cost, Time, Personnel, Services involved
Commissioning, Policy
Outcomes - Cost Savings?
NMC MH Nursing Standards
MH Nursing Curricula

#Website not provided: "Service Temporarily Unavailable" 

*There is a 'problem' here. Is the main symptom and sign however, evidence of an ongoing lack of parity of esteem?

My source: Twitter - various

 

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

The Filing Cabinet: A Vertical History of Information

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The Filing Cabinet: A Vertical History of Information

-TECHNICAL
SOCIO-




 
Don't forget the horizontal history and better prepare for the future too?
 

The Filing Cabinet: A Vertical History of Information. Craig Robertson. University of Minnesota Press. 2021.

My source: Peter Kurilecz, RECORDS-MANAGEMENT-UK mail list

https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=RECORDS-MANAGEMENT-UK 

Jones, P. (1996) Humans, Information, and Science, Journal of Advanced Nursing, 24(3),591-598.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Book: v "Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights"

 

A few points from the book to close:

Extending Human Rights beyond HIV: The Struggle against Tuberculosis (pp.229-231).

Afterword: Resilience in the Fight for Human Rights in Global Health

the first lesson of first aid.

"You can best care for the world when you take care of yourself." (p.459).

 

The index is very good. I might have expected more on corruption, fraud, and counterfeit healthcare products, but then this could be a distraction. It is alarming to read of the ongoing criminalization of groups in Asia, Africa and globally concerned with substance misuse and sexual health.

Even though I can extend thanks to OUP for my copy. Reading this book is a great investment in time.

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"You are not alone.
Together, we can build a brighter future." p.460.

The book's closing sentence is an appeal to practitioners and as the past 18 months and the future will surely continue to reveal places a stress on self-care.


Tuberculosis
HIV
Ebola
COVID
Malaria
...
'laws on the streets*'

ETHNO-



'duty to assist' p.448 UK?



'laws on the books'

-NATIONALISM (chapter 20)

Human rights literacy (p.143.)

Universal Periodic Review - "a basis to assess the human rights situation in states throughout the world, seeking a holistic, equitable, and balanced approach to reviewing the situation of all human rights in all countries." (p. 166.)
 
 
Many thanks to OUP.
 
*Do people have an address? p.145.
[ Previously: https://hodges-model.blogspot.com/2021/01/book-review-iii-leave-no-one-behind-lnob.html ]


Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights. (2020) Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier (Eds.), Oxford: OUP. ISBN: 9780197528303.
 

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Health for All Film Festival still available c/o GANM

Dear Colleagues,

WHO HQ is delighted to share with you that the Health for All Film Festival still available for replay at www.who.int/film-festival in three languages, and would like to call your attention to the GRAND PRIX, an animation about a dedicated nurse (Phosphoros)? A student from El Salvador made this emotional film.

The above link contains a player with the six sessions of the event being accessible directly, and this helps now the public look at the portion they are interested in. You can easily access the playlist of winning films at:

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9S6xGsoqIBWS_JUFdjXpdvLL86R_8VQq 

Global Network of WHO Collaborating Centers for Nursing and Midwifery Secretariat
Johns Hopkins School of Nursing
525 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205

E. son-whocc AT jhu.edu
W. globalnetworkwhocc.com


Source: https://groups.ibpnetwork.org/g/global

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Dementia research meets motorsports: Innovation Accelerator

Are you an early career researcher with an interest in dementia?

Would you like the chance to collaborate, innovate and compete?

Race Against Dementia and the DEMON Network, in partnership with Cranfield University, are inviting applications to participate in our Innovation Accelerator. This unique event will bring together teams of early career dementia scientists and similar stage experts from the motorsport industry, create diversity of thinking and break down ‘silos’ that currently exist between institutions and disciplines.

You will have the opportunity to think big and outside the box, develop ambitious ideas and learn from experts in the motorsports industry and other commercial enterprises with track records of rapid progress and innovation.

Ultimately, you will pitch to secure a hypothetical £20k seed funding prize. This competitive workshop will prepare you as an innovator to create successful applications for dementia research funding. It is also an opportunity to network and develop collaborative relationships.


More detail including how to apply.

My source: DEMON network.


Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Gatekeeping: Across the care domains

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INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ----------------------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
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group
Cognitive gate (access):
Mental state: Risk to Self/Others?
Literacy: My articulation of my needs
Understanding of Consultation/plan
Service name: acronyms

My understanding hence awareness of services, referral
Opt-in
Self-neglect

Physical gate (access):
Physical state 'emergency'?
Telephone call, reception

Obtain appointment
Phone/Video, Face-to-Face
Surgery, Clinic, Hospital, Home

Letter: 'x' days?
[ Triage
Assessment, Planning
Intervention
Evaluation ]

Individual: Collective: WAIT data?

Social-Cultural gate:
Cultural diversity/Accessibility
Service - Semiotics/Semantics/Signage

Family/Social commitments (access)
Sociology of Illness/Sick role
Carer role
Community/Local Understanding & Involvement?
Reporting, Info sharing

Political gate:

Service Provision/Use [by postcode?]
Referrer's knowledge ...
"Policy says..." ...
URGENT, routine, 1,5 days...
Service Pathways/Signage/Appearances

Work commitments (access)
Previously known?
[ MAIN GATE: Therapeutic Modality? ]
 
Open to suggestions... 

Saturday, May 15, 2021

Webinar: Public Health and Responsible Innovation in a post-Covid Europe

On May 20th 2021 14:00-17:20 CEST a Webinar on Public Health and Responsible Innovation in a post-Covid Europe is organized by De Montfort University and “la Caixa” Foundation

As Covid-19 will remain a part of our lives for the next years, the role of public and preventative health has been rarely so important. Digital tools and technologies offer great opportunities to the healthcare sector. However, the challenges and risks in this aspect have to be considered critically.

This webinar will focus on:

  • the challenges and dilemmas for Responsible Innovation in the public health sector; 
  • bringing together community and commercial perspectives; and
  • helping to chart a responsible and sustainable way forward for innovation in public health.

Join this forward thinking event and:

  • Learn about recent developments for Responsible Innovation and how these fit with goals for CSR, ESG, circularity, the UN SDGs and European policy agendas; 
  • Engage, through your questions, in the dialogue between leading experts; and
  • Help your organisation when designing and developing health-related products, providing or procuring technologies and services in a responsible and sustainable way.

Please register under https://www.living-innovation.net/signup


My source:

Malcolm Fisk, Professor of Ageing and Digital Health at De Montfort University

Friday, May 14, 2021

Book: iv "Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights"

When I (really) was a student nurse, advocacy was an important facet of patient care. Not surprising in a Victorian asylum (Winwick Hospital). Institutional care was literally, the order of the day and night. New initiatives (individualised care) included personal clothing, not what could be found on the shelves of the linen room (and watch for the cockroaches too); but knowing the patients to the extent of exercising  the tailor's eye of knowing what would fit.

This was twenty years before the UK Human Rights Act 1998, and the focus too upon consent and mental capacity. In the 1990s - 2000s nurses  as advocates was questioned. Now while clearly not a return, there is a need for mental health nurses and future practitioners in particular to reassess this role, in partnership with patients and team members with lived experience. 

What about the book? Yes! Well, a reason for nurses to advocate, is to ensure patients and communities are aware of  their rights. So accustomed to the demand - supply equation and the politics of the healthcare market, we miss the deeper historical development of the 'rights holder' and 'duty bearer' (Figure 2.1, p.49).

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Rights holder
(Awareness, Access to Information, Literacies)

Demand of Rights
(Data)

Actions to Realize Rights
(Social Justice?)

Duty bearer
(Policy, Reporting, Accountability)

 
 
One more to follow... I think ...

Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights. (2020) Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier (Eds.), Oxford: OUP. ISBN: 9780197528303.
 

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Arts for Brain Health: 'Social Prescribing as Peri-Diagnostic Practice for Dementia'

Thursday and Friday 20-21 May 2021, 9.20 am – 5 pm

D-IAGNOSIS! Arts to Preserve Wellbeing (Jane Frere, 2019, pastel)

An opportunity for GPs, social prescribers, arts and health organisations, educationalists and funders, innovative and creative ageing specialists, local authorities and policy makers to come together and revolutionise the world of social prescribing for brain health.

Cultural and creative activity can be transformational for those at the start of their journey with dementia.

In this conference we explore how social prescribing can unlock access to the arts and dramatically improve wellbeing and brain health.

We look at the impact of engaging in weekly creative and wellbeing activity
and examine the potential for normalising social prescribing as diagnostic practice around the UK

Bringing together leading experts in the fields of arts, culture, health and wellbeing,
this online conference will highlight cross-sector referral and funding partnership practice
for sustainable social prescription programmes,
presenting evidence for creative ageing and debating the way forward.

More info ...

 My source: @Arts4Dementia

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

HSJ: Human centred systems - the case for [disintegrated] integration

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group
Listening, communication slip ups

YOU! are a -
“bed blocker” “frequent flyer”

My purpose

Valuable or Vulnerable person?

“PROTECT the Person
Services, Teams, Silos

Repeated doubling up, duplication
Threshold raising
simplify the steps

1940s style factory production line model

? 5-year cycle, interventions, (budget) ?

Place-based
Neighbourhoods

Anthropology of Communities

PUBLIC - 'shared purpose'

lived experience - develop a more flexible multidisciplinary workforce


coproduction :: purchaser provider led model of commissioning

social scaffolding in neighbourhoods -  
initiatives

Organisation
'INTEGRATE'

Sovereignty, governance structures, pooled budgets

“PROTECT the NHS”

Public Service reform: 
local government, dept of work and pensions,  police, housing and community and voluntary organisations.

 - joint investment models
 
Human centred systems - the case for integration, By Donna Hall, 15 February 2021. HSJ. https://www.hsj.co.uk/service-design/human-centred-systems-the-case-for-integration/7029472.article 
 
My source: https://twitter.com/antlerboy/status/1392547724201971716?s=20

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

National NHS & social care staff survey launched to build future workforce resilience

Good morning Colleague,

National NHS and social care staff survey launched:“to build a culture of workforce resilience that is organisational-based - not just reliant on the individual.”

Launched this week, the ‘Developing a Resilient Workforce Survey’, funded by Skills for Health, aims to identify the critical development shortages of the nation's NHS and social care workforce at an individual, organisational and systemic level, to support the UK government and sector leaders implement measures that will not only protect staff from pressures that pre-date the pandemic but, crucially, address the new challenges they will continue to face as a result of it.

John Rogers, Chief Executive at Skills for Health says: “As the nation emerges from the pandemic, there has never been a greater need to address the challenges of NHS and social care workforce development. Workforce issues remain the biggest concern facing the sector and now is the time to ensure long-term plans are based on an accurate evidence-based understanding of the needs of the workforce. The upcoming NHS Bill offers an opportunity to create a truly integrated workforce and this research can help inform policy to both improve the workplace for our people and build a workforce which is better able to meet the needs of patients in the future.”

Download the press release here (with survey link)

Kindest regards,

Tara Duffy
PR and Communications Manager
Skills for Health

Monday, May 10, 2021

Book: iii "Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights"

When you've several books to get to, a steady stream of figures and tables can help give the illusion of a speed-read. There could be many such breaks in this book, but what there are are focused, informative and fit the COVID situation in being prime for take-away purposes. It is here that the educational, learning and teaching utility of the book is found, and in the references.

Reading this book I thought about the way healthcare is situated and how care-of global politics health is local, national, international and glocal. The global health workforce are joined in the books they read. Then they apply their learning in their respective corners of the world, seeking to put the patient, the person, the public at the center. As such Section 1 is essential reading for all health and social care professionals:

Introduction: Global Health & Human Rights

Lawrence O. Gostin & Benjamin Mason Meier
I. The Human Rights Movement: International Norms and Principles 

Chapter 1. The Birth and Development of Human Rights for Health
Benjamin Mason Meier, Thérèse Murphy & Lawrence O. Gostin

Chapter 2. Global Health Law: Legal Foundations for Social Justice in Public Health
Lawrence O. Gostin, Matiangai V. S. Sirleaf & Eric A. Friedman

Chapter 3. The Right to Health and Health-Related Human Rights
John Tobin & Damon Barrett

Chapter 4. The Rights-Based Approach to Health
Flavia Bustreo & Curtis F.J. Doebbler

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"Given the integral link between global health and human rights, global health law necessarily works in synergy with human rights. Accordingly, global health law includes not only the scope of law for global health, but also a normative perspective, with global health law seeking to enable all people to realize the right to health (Magnusson, et al. 2017). This normative perspective is not uncommon in law: environmental law is concerned with protecting the environment, trade law is concerned with a free and fair system of trade, and human rights law is concerned with protecting and promoting rights. The particular force of global health law's normative perspective comes in how it is not confirmed to laws directly related to health, but rather has significant implications for a wide range of laws in other legal regimes, requiring a focus on health in all policies." p.59.

Chapter 3. The Right to Health and Health-Related Human Rights
John Tobin & Damon Barrett

 
More to follow...

Foundations of Global Health & Human Rights. (2020) Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier (Eds.), Oxford: OUP. ISBN: 9780197528303.
 

Saturday, May 08, 2021

[c/o HIFA] Lancet Planetary Health: An argument for the naturalistic study of collective intelligence

Citation, extracts and a comment from me below. Full text here: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196(21)00077-2/

CITATION: An argument for the naturalistic study of collective intelligence Jonathan Nattel, David Akullian
Comment| volume 5, issue 5, e247-e248, may 01, 2021
Published:May, 2021 DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00077-2 

SELECTED EXTRACTS 

Over the past decade, corporate-owned digital media—minimally regulated, geared towards profit, and willing to engage a broad range of psychological techniques to command an expansive swath of human attention5—have increasingly caused information to flow around, rather than through, the structures of professional journalism as it makes its way from politicians to the public at large.

The circumvention of professional journalism as a means for filtering, organising, and distributing information has led to multiple distortions of collective perception, including the decontextualisation of information, propagation of false information, and the manipulation of public opinion by agents with a broad variety of interests. 

 the overall result has been an increase in polarisation, fragmented collective perceptions of reality, and the ensuing failures of collective discourse and decision making. All in all, ideal conditions for the emergence of populist, fascist, or dictatorial leadership. 

A study of how information is channelled within a society to support collective wellbeing and decision making might allow us to ask crucial questions, such as when a new technology for communication arrives, in what way is it healthy? In what way is it unhealthy? And in what ways must it be contained?... Given the critical juncture at which humanity currently finds itself, the timing of such a project could hardly be more crucial.

 --

Comment (NPW): 'The circumvention of professional journalism... has led to multiple distortions'. The same could be said for the circumvention of processes required for reliable and actionalble healthcare information to be made available to end users (whether the public, health workers, or policymakers). 

Neil Pakenham-Walsh, 

HIFA Coordinator, neil AT hifa.org www.hifa.org

HIFA: Healthcare Information For All: www.hifa.org 

I  have related concepts from this short work to Hodges' model, followed by a reference that reflects the naturalistic scale of the study suggested here:

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[ Multi- ] Context - Situated [ model ]

HEALTH WORKERS

individual perception & intelligence
- literacy

Individual values

Individual sense making

WELL-BEING of NATURAL WORLD

HEALTH WORKERS

Physical PROCESSES: Time

[Is there an 'Over-arching theory of health communication'?]

Channels of information - tech / forms

WELL-BEING of SOCIETY

Intergenerational coherence (*amid change*)

PUBLIC

Social processes: Diffusion, Sharing

SOCIO-tech?

societies: channels of information?

collective perception & intelligence
(wisdom of crowds?)

Channels of information - control

Journalism

Populist, fascist, or dictatorial leadership

POLICYMAKERS

Digital & other divides?

Political processes

Electoral Politics
 
 
Jones, P. (1996) An overarching theory of health communication? Health Informatics Journal,2,1,28-34.

Thursday, May 06, 2021

Book: Empire of Pain

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group
PSYCHOLOGICAL PAIN
Empire of Pain
How do governments recognise individual pain?

How do governments recognise individual trauma?
A protest sculpture of a bent heroin spoon is placed outside the Purdue Pharma headquarters in Connecticut in 2018 © New York Times / Redux / eyevine c/o FT.

Gapper, J., Deadly Painkillers, Life&Arts, FTWeekend, 1-2 May, 2021. p.8.

Online: https://www.ft.com/content/1db7800f-78d5-474e-9b1e-744b1c1a837c

Book cover: https://www.foyles.co.uk/

BBC Radio 4: Start the Week, The opioid crisis and erosion of trust

Wednesday, May 05, 2021

Thought Press

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THOUGHT PRESS




"We are 100 UK printmakers creating prints on the theme of childhood memories and imagination, to be sold in aid of two charities - Mind, supporting mental health issues and awareness, and Heart Felt Tips, providing art materials and enabling creative learning opportunities for disadvantaged children. (For more information about these charities and what they do, please visit www.mind.org.uk and www.heartfelttips.co.uk)

Follow the hashtag #thoughtpressproject on social media to see the project in action and development of designs for final prints! Visit the Shop to order a print.

If you'd simply like to add to the funds raised, please donate here:

https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/thoughtpressprojectdonations

My source: Printmaking Today, Spring 2021, Volume 30, Issue 117, p.7.

Tuesday, May 04, 2021

Metacognition: new developments and challenges - Conference / Symposium

Date
24 June 2021 - 25 June 2021
Institute
Institute of Philosophy
Type
Conference / Symposium
Venue
Woburn Suite G22/26

*The event will be hybrid in-person - online, further details will be announced soon*

* For further information and the Call for Papers click here*

Selected speakers:

Ophelia Deroy
LMU Munich
School of Advanced Study, University of London

Steve Fleming
UCL

Louise Goupil
École Normale Supérieure

John Morrison
Barnard College

Josef Perner
University of Salzburg

Joëlle Proust
Institut Jean Nicod

Alex Rosati
University of Michigan

In recent years the scope of metacognition has expanded. Metacognitive processes seem to be involved in practically all cognitive faculties: perception, action, memory, learning, decision making, and conceptual thought are some examples. It encompasses many cases where metacognition operates without the person engaging in deliberate monitoring or control. Evidence for metacognition also extends to pre-verbal infants and non-human animals. But are there fundamentally different types of metacognition involved in different cases? And how should we capture the distinction: procedural vs. analytic, experience-based vs. information-based, implicit vs. explicit, core vs. late-developing, or some other way?

To book click here

For enquires about the conference please get in touch with Eloise Rowley, eloise.rowley AT sas.ac.uk

This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme grant agreement No. 681422. For further information about the ‘Metacognition of Concepts’ project, see the project’s website: http://www.nicholasshea.co.uk/ 

My source:

Philos-L "The Liverpool List" is run by the Department of Philosophy, University of Liverpool https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/philosophy/philos-l/ 
Recent posts can also be read in a Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosL/ 
Follow the list on Twitter @PhilosL. Follow the Department of Philosophy @LiverpoolPhilos

Monday, May 03, 2021

Workshop - Patient access to medical records: the patient's view

You may be interested in this online meeting/workshop for 3-5pm May 12th 

Patient access to medical records: the patient's view


It is open to all, free of course, and registration is here:


The aim of the meeting is to add another little push towards getting this higher priority in the UK.  The assumption for the session is that most if not all who turn up will already be convinced of the benefits - but nevertheless it is useful to (re)hear some of those benefits from patients, and maybe one or two of the frustrations, and then get discussion from those present as to how it can be given higher priority by CCGs, Trusts, politicians, etc.

The meeting will be on Zoom and the provisional timetable is:

3:00-3.10            Ray Jones - Introduction (aim of the workshop, a little background, and welcome)

Short presentations taking questions and comments by the typed chat room

3:10-3.30            Liz Salmi - US experience of Open Notes
3.30-3.40            Jene Jinatun - experience 1 from Haughton Thornnley Medical Centre
3.40-3.50            Cheryl Ashton - experience 2 from Haughton Thornley Medical Centre
3.50-4.00            Fran Husson - experience of Patient Knows Best (London)
4.00-4.05            Nik Seth - comparing Patient Access in Estonia with the UK
4.05-4.10            Mar Soler-Lopez - comparing Patient Access in Madrid with the UK
4.15-4.45            Break out room discussion: how can patient groups help bring about better availability and uptake of patient access?
4.45-5.00            Feedback- 1 or 2 points from each group.
5pm                    Close

Please do register and come if you can, and please pass on to anyone and everyone. In particular if you have contacts in the media please invite them - given the need for patients to take control of their health information this should be topical and normally the media likes to take a 'personal story' approach.

Thanks
Ray

Ray Jones

Professor of Health Informatics, School of Nursing and Midwifery

Co-Facilitator for Centre for Health Technology
Research Gate
Email: ray.jones AT plymouth.ac.uk
University of Plymouth, Faculty of Health, PL4 8AA
__________

Source:
HIFA: Healthcare Information For All: www.hifa.org

Sunday, May 02, 2021

THE REASONER 15(3)

THE  REASONER 15(3)
_____________________________
       
Volume 15, Number 3, May-June  2021

ISSN 1757-05 22


The latest issue of The Reasoner is now freely available for download in pdf format at: [http://www.thereasoner.org/]
 
 
Via mail list.