Social Networks
Monday Morning
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 03/14/2011 - 09:26It is a bright sunny morning in Jacksonville, FL. I arrived last night on an uneventful flight from Connecticut. For the next three days, I’ll be at a conference on social media and health care. I may be tweeting a lot, so if conference tweeting annoys you, you might want to unfollow me until Thursday. I expect that my blogging may also be a little sparse for the next few days.
I am currently working off of my old IBM laptop. I’m going to guess that it is about six years old. I’ve installed Linux on it, and it mostly runs smoothly, but it has been freezing a bit recently, so I’m trying to do some updates. However, the hotel WiFi is pretty slow.
On the plane down, I worked on the laptop a little as well as played with my Android phone in Airplane mode. I didn’t have a lot installed on the Android that worked in Airplane mode. So, I’m thinking I should try to tweak it for the flight back. Adding a podcast player would probably be good. Also, I have Squeak running on Android on my N900, so it might be fun to see if I can get squeak to run on the Samsung Android. I did take the MicroSD card from my N900 and put it in my Samsung. I could get to the files, but couldn’t launch Squeak.
I also kicked around running a virtual world program on my laptop. I have Imprudence and Hippo loaded on my laptop. However, I don’t currently have an instance of OpenSim running, so without an internet connection, there wasn’t a virtual world I could connect to.
I’m also thinking it is time to kick around Blender or some other good animation program. I’m also thinking it might be good to kick around Alice again sometime soon, and even take another shot at OpenCroquet.
It was nice to be disconnected from the internet for an extended period, but still have access to technology. It gave me more time to kick around ideas of things I should try to set up.
Meanwhile, I got a phone call from home. Kim has been sick, and now Fiona has gotten it.
I Get My News on Twitter
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 03/13/2011 - 10:28I’ve just packed for the social media conference in Florida and threw my shirt with ‘I Get My News on Twitter’ on it in the bag. It is often a good conversation started.
I’ve been thinking about this a bit over the past few days as I’ve followed what is going on in Japan via tweets. Various topics have trended, with Fukushima often on the list, accompanied by Godzilla and Pearl Harbor. The Godzilla and Pearl Harbor topics have been gotten plenty of complaints. Is it really appropriate to talk about Godzilla during a nuclear emergency in Japan? Can anyone in their right mind talk about one of the worst earthquakes in recorded history as appropriate payback for Pearl Harbor?
As an aside, the best Godzilla comment I saw was that if you want Godzilla backwards, he repairs a half destroyed burning city and then moonwalks into the ocean.
There have been a lot of tweets about Fukushima. Reading the tweets and various article and websites linked to the tweets, it seems like there are a lot of people presenting different viewpoints reflecting their own views as opposed to what is going on. Some talk about how it isn’t really a big issue. Others point to the coverup of a nuclear accident several years ago and wonder what is being covered up now.
There have been pictures and videos posted of the powerplants and maps of what could happen if radiation is spread.
It is a stark reminder about how fragile we all are, especially when confronted by a large natural disaster.
Yeah, I get my news via twitter, but I also very carefully check my sources.
Twitter Responses
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 03/06/2011 - 15:30@EricTTung #swct #sxsw @MatthewBrowning #agpa @dr_bob @GroupTherapyCal @gracesonia @nachc #fqhc @RicDragon @2ndot #beerup @dinothinks
This morning, I received an email from Postling listing people that mention me or responded to something I’ve written on social media sites. Instead of responding to different people individually, I thought I would respond to several of them here.
First, there are the Follow Friday messages and replies. Shoutouts to @EricTTung @HarpethRising @MatthewBrowning @DME1661 @Jordanfenster, and @NewHavenRentry
Then, there was my Hashable invite. I’ve signed up, added friends to my inner circle, but so far, it hasn’t clicked for me.
@EricTTung asked me and some others about some good social media based conferences. @TedRubin responded highlighting ‘#SXSW, Mashable Connect 2011, DigidaySocial, #BWE’. There is a good discussion on Quora about this.
Hopefully, Social Web Week Connecticut will be a good local event this year. Planning is starting to get underway
On Saturday morning, I was at the American Group Psychotherapy Association conference where I participated in a panel with @dr_bob. We tweeted parts of it, and it was great to meet @GroupTherapyCal
@gracesonia, who I met through the National Association of Community Health Centers (@nachc) which deals with Federally Qualified Health Centers, #fqhc asked what #agpa was. Grace, it is the American Group Psychotherapy Association, which is a great group. I was surprised not to see overlap between AGPA and NACHC. That’s something to explore.
After the panel I was on ended, I headed up to the Cloisters with @dr_bob where I checked in on Foursquare. @RicDragon commented that it was a nice place to be on a Saturday, and I agree. I hope to post some pictures soon.
Two final Twitter replies. @2ndot comment about what a great time the #beerup at Eli Cannon’s in Middletown was. It was great. I was glad to see many friends there. During the #beerup, I mentioned to various people some of my cider brewing activities. I get many of my supplies at Maltose Express in Monroe. They just had some special event and @dinothinks ousted me as mayor of Maltose. I don’t expect to challenge him for the mayorship until next fall when cider brewing season rolls around.
So, that catches me up on my replies to various friends on social media and helps provide a glimpse into different aspects of my life.
Foursquare For Good?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 02/24/2011 - 20:32Recently, CHC joined the Social Media Health Network. (Note: I work for CHC, but this is a personal blog post, reflecting my own views, and not necessarily opinions of CHC). On the Social Media Health Network, I read a little bit about hospitals on Foursquare. The blog post pointed to a survey of hospitals on Foursquare as well as provided some interesting ideas about what health organizations should be doing with Foursquare.
With this in the back of my mind, I attended a meeting this afternoon, where we were talking about using social media to improve teens’ health. I started talking about Foursquare and dug around a little bit.
Eli Cannon’s a pub in Middletown has had 329 different people check-in for a total of 783 check-ins. There are a dozen tips about things to do at Eli Cannon’s, with half of them reported as being done by multiple people.
In contrast, the the YWCA in New Britain only has five people that have check-in, for a total of seven check-ins, and no tips. It made me think, can we use Foursquare for good? Can we get people to try the arm curls instead of the curly fries? Are their other venues and other actions that we can encourage people to visit and do?
Dr. Strong, Meet Mr. Friedman
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 02/05/2011 - 18:05As social media manager for Community Health Center, Inc. in Connecticut, I try to build healthy communities using online tools. It requires trying to stay on top of news about technology and health care and spending time thinking about things like the relationships between doctors and their patients.
Last week, I read two interesting articles. The first was the Health Topics report from the Pew Internet and American Life Project. It said
Eight in ten internet users look online for health information, making it the third most popular online activity among all those included in the Pew Internet Project’s surveys.
Of that, 44% of Internet users have looked online for information about doctors or other health professionals.
Let me digress for a moment. I am writing this on my own blog on my own time and it expresses my own opinions and not necessarily those of CHC. This blog post also has a little criticism of CHC. It is generally poor form to criticize one’s employer in a blog, even if such speech may be protected, but I am hoping that the criticism will be taken as something constructive and I will be given a chance to help address the criticism.
CHC does not do as good a job as I wish it did in providing information about its medical providers online. We’re having some good discussions about it, but it isn’t there yet. On the other hand, many health organizations fail in this category, and some make CHC seem stellar.
This brings me to the second article I read last week, and the title for this blog post. A Texas television station ran a story about Doctors asking patients to sign gag orders to stop unfavorable online comments.
To me, this is a red flag. I’m a free speech fanatic. Any doctor asking me to sign something like this is sending a message that they aren’t very good and they want it hidden. It is sort of like the doctors offices that have big posters asking patients to support tort reform. A doctor that is telling me that they are really concerned about how much money they could be sued for also seems to be telling me that maybe they aren’t that good. Side note: I recognize the issues of malpractice insurance premiums, so this second concern is not as prominent for me, although I will admit that I’ve left practices because of their strong advocacy for tort reform.
Back to the gag orders: A few years ago I heard Tom Friedman talk at Personal Democracy Forum. He was talking about the power of the Internet in politics and the importance of political figures having websites. The phrase that I remember him saying was something like,
On the Internet, either you do it, or someone does it to you.
These doctors that are asking patients to sign gag orders are missing this key aspect of what the Internet has done for American life. We have more of a conversation. Good doctors join in conversations with their patients. They make their practices patient centered.
CHC, from what I’ve seen is a leader in patient centered medicine. There is much that can be written about that, and I hope to, over the coming days. Unlike the doctors from Texas, CHC, as well as other high quality health centers around the country should take Tom Friedman’s lead and facilitate patients talking about their practices. Those who fail to do so are perhaps hiding their light under a basket.
By encouraging comments, we may get a few negative comments. No matter what you do, you are likely to get a few. If you are lucky, they will be ones that you can learn from, and get better. However, I suspect that CHC, given its great staff, will get many more comments like the one on the Google Place page, Community Health Center Inc: Gellrich Gabriella MD:
Finally!! Real doctors who listen to the problems of their patients rather than just giving a nod and pretending they understand or care. Everyone from the reception desk to the physicians were helpful, knowledgeable, and respectful. I had no problems contacting them on the phone to set up appointments in the two years of going to them. They are, in my humble opinion, the best health care providers in the Danbury area.
One friend said that perhaps Friedman has it wrong and instead of saying ‘they will do it to you’, he should have said, they will do it for you. Politicians, and doctors, who are afraid of the public, are likely to be afraid people with ‘do it to them’. Politicians, and doctors, who are well respected should hope that the public will ‘do it for them’. CHC has every reason to believe that its patients will spread the word and do it for us.