Social Networks
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 05/11/2011 - 20:38#ff @CHCHealthCorps @andreayap @KatSongPR @davelucas @heddahfeddah @HartfordMayor @VargasforMayor @CouncilorCotto @richquigley
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 05/06/2011 - 20:42Okay. A fairly random collection of Follow Friday listings this week… I’ll start off with @CHCHealthCorps. This is a new Twitter account for “a team of 12 AmeriCorps Community HealthCorps members serving at Community Health Center, Inc. in cities throughout Connecticut” They are getting ready for their big trip across Connecticut and it would be great for a bunch of people to follow them.
@andreayap is an old friend from @Ripple100. I ran into him today at a health care conference and we had lunch afterwards.
@KatSongPR – I may have mentioned her recently in a #ff. I did Retweet her quote from Abraham Lincoln about the Internet.
@davelucas – Dave is an old blogging friend who wanted to know about my problems with Amazon Web Services. I still need to write that quote.
@heddahfeddah is an old twitter contact who write a lot about Hartford and recently tweeted about a whale watch on the Dolphin Fleet out of Provincetown.
@HartfordMayor recently sent out a press release about getting his 1000th follower.
@VargasforMayor wants to become the next Hartford Mayor and mentioned me, my wife, @CouncilorCotto and some others in a tweet about a Politico article.
@CouncilorCotto also from Hartford, commented about my tweet about the Woodbridge elections. Apparently, he got the election results from my tweet a day late. Not sure what happened there.
Then there are the Quigley brothers, @richquigley and @RobQuigley. I’ve mentioned them in tweets and #FF posts a bit recently and they have come back with interesting responses.
Finally, I’ll shout out to @lenpeters. He just became the new CIO for @Yale. He doesn’t have a lot of followers yet and doesn’t tweet a lot yet, but hopefully that will change soon enough.
So, that is my Follow Friday post for the first Friday of May.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 05/04/2011 - 07:28Should Doctors and Patients be Friends Online?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 04/30/2011 - 08:46As many of my regular readers know, I have been a long time advocate for social media and I over the winter, I took a position as Social Media Manager for The Community Health Center, Inc. headquartered in Middletown, CT.
With that, I’ve joined the Mayo Clinic Social Media Network. Recently, we’ve been having a discussion about whether doctors and patients should be friends online. It started around the blog post, Boundaries in all their shades of gray.
It seemed like much of the discussion was focused on the doctors, and not on the patients, so I thought I would try to get a sense of what everyone else is thinking. So, I posted a question on Facebook:
Would You Like Your Doctors to Follow you on Facebook, Twitter, or other social media sites?
So far, close to 70 people have responded. Over half have answered ‘no’, which I find quite interesting and I plan on writing more about this soon.
First, however, I need to note various problems. This is not a scientific survey. Anyone can change their vote at any time. The folks being surveyed are my friends on Facebook as well as any friends of friends or other people that might have stumbled across the survey. The current results are shown, which may influence responses, and there is not exploration into the demographics of who has responded and only a comment section where some people explain their reasoning.
There have been various comments that reflect some of the underlying thoughts.
“Don't see why would it matter. I mean, it's not like my doctor is the only one who gets to see me naked ;-)”
“my dr. has his hands full trying to get my blood pressure under control.”
“I'd like my doc to be my friend on facebook, with the caveat that insurance companies NOT be able to use any info on my FB page to block access to care.”
“there's far too many ways institutions can use 'raw data' as implications, wrongly I might add.”
“I don't imagine there's anything on my Facebook that could negatively affect my care or coverage, but you know? People have been unpleasantly surprised by things like this before.”
“I don't get the issue... If you're hiding things from your doctor, that's kinda short sighted isn't it?
If I've learned anything from House, it's that the thing you are lying about is the thing that is killing you!”
“I'll bet it's a generational thing ... When you're almost 50 you remember a time when every little thing about you was not instantaneous knowledge to everyone who's ever met you.”
So, what do you think? Please, consider adding your vote and your comments.