HealthCamp Toronto

Join us at HealthCamp Toronto on Sept. 16, 2009!

HealthCamp Toronto will use the “unconference” format to create a safe place for contrarians, free thinkers, change agents and idea entrepreneurs. It is the first healthcamp in Canada, modeled after the globally renowned healthcamp movement begun in San Francisco, Boston, and Philadelphia.

Challenge: Reducing Motor Vehicle Deaths

By Neil Seeman

Do you have an idea for making our roads safer?

Imagine if we could end motor vehicle fatalities like the one that killed Niloufar Khanverdizadeh and Atena Arabsalmany on Halloween night. Young, beautiful minds, just 21 – crushed by blunt force trauma after their car lurched into the oncoming traffic lane at 10:30 p.m. in Richmond Hill, Ontario.

My Rage Against the Machine (and What Healthcare can Learn from Steve Jobs)

My Rage against the Machine (and what Healthcare can Learn from Steve Jobs)

By Neil Seeman

“If your computer’s noise level is still unbearable after you’ve re-installed a new fan, then it’s a freak of nature.” The gentle-voiced technician, a rare live voice from 24/7 customer service (on a Sunday!), told me “it would then be a one in a million machine” if the fan replacement failed. His name was Julius; he gave me his phone number. If he proved correct, I promised I would call to thank him. He said no one ever thanks him.

I didn’t call Julius back – mine was that one in a million machine.

The Heidi Assumption

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

The turtles don’t seem to mind that I’m sharing the rock with them here at the top of the French River in Ontario, Canada. Clearly I’m still enough so as not to disturb them, dumbstruck as I am, here in the reptile warming sun.

I guess I know how they feel covered over with a carapace. I’ve recognized in my thinking some assumptions, and what are assumptions if not a desensitizing exoskeleton? I’ve just read Richard B. Wright’s October.

Is the Personal Health Record just for the healthy and wealthy?

By Neil Seeman

Is the PHR like the "executive physical"? Some have suggested that personal health records (PHRs) - a system whereby patients enjoy custodial rights to their secure health data anytime, anywhere - is a privilege that appeals just to the wealthy, healthy or "worried well."

Ending Workplace Rudeness. For our Health.

By Neil Seeman

People’s fingers tapping on their Blackberries during meetings, a lack of “thank yous”, urgent e-mails going unanswered…welcome to the modern workplace. Is it just me, or is passive-aggressive behavior more acute in the workplace these days? (Maybe I am just thin-skinned). And, if it is getting worse, does it have an impact on workplace health? What, if anything, can be done to reverse the trend?

Mind, Money, Momentum

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

The year is 1782. Night after night, and years after that, William and Caroline Herschel worked at their telescopes. Many of their discoveries were a surprise to them. Some came from a studied and methodical mapping of the skies, but the revelations themselves were not willed. They came from a lifetime of dedication and the building of expertise. They came from uncertainty and curiosity.

Jane's Voice: Trust, Innovation, and Humility

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

Trust. There’s a lot of talk about trust these days. It’s mostly about money. Can we trust the banks, the stock broker or the realtor? It’s also about health though. Why get a test? The results are unreliable. Why get a test? My doctor won’t look at the results.

Ending Professional Snobbery

By Neil Seeman

Imagine if no prestige attached to professions. Nobody cared about old-world credentials…MD, PhD, JD, MBA, MPH, MHsC: the letters would mean nothing, zip, in this alternate world.

It’s not so far off. Welcome to 2015, the year the Facebook generation is married with kids. This is when Mark Zuckerberg, 24-year-old billionaire, Facebook founder and Harvard dropout, turns 30.

Groupthink vs. Groupthank

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

Biting the hand that feeds you is considered an unwise act, unless you work with the Health Strategy Innovation Cell. I think us “Cellies” like it, at least we like a little nibbling, and so I want to roll over a few thoughts on the topic of Healthcamp Toronto. If I disappear like Deng Xiaoping you’ll know why.

Redefining Patienthood

This is a 1-2 minute survey that explores the 'patient' and 'ePatient' definitions in the current health care system. Our goal is to croud-source the definition for these terms.

This is an anonymous survey and the answers/data visualization will be available to all respondents at the end of the survey. We do not foresee any risks from completing this survey.

Jane's Voice: Cancer - Our Collective Autobiography

Cancer: Our Collective Autobiography?

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

There’s a book I’d been wanting to read for quite a while. I went to the bookstore to get it and picked it up. Then, I started wandering around and ended up buying a couple of books about beekeeping instead. Choices. Choices. Choices.

A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century by Barbara W. Tuchman, I understand, was all the rage when it came out in 1978.

Jane's Voice: Healthcare and the Salons of France

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

Sitting in my garden watching a squirrel flow over and under fences with no acknowledgement of a barrier, other than the navigational one, I’m thinking of that critter’s open source attitude. He seems to be of the mind that all’s available to him and it’s available for his use and sustenance. Looking at Simon Schama’s Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution, I’m thinking about how the salons of Paris in the late 1700s compare to the birth of the internet and even to the Innovation Cell of which I’m a part.

Mashable Open Web Awards

Mashable is encouraging a bit of self-promotion and we are going to play along. This year their Open Web Awards has a category for Best Non Profit Use of Social Media and we think we may fit their bill. What do you think?

Power of "Buzz"

By Jane La Mantia de Pencier

The Health Strategy Innovation Cell founded The Global Accelerator Award. It's an award for creating buzz and chatter on the web. Why is there an award for chatter? Didn’t we get in trouble for this at school? What’s the value of buzz? I wondered. I didn't get it.

Then, a giant lever began to squeak in my loner inclined brain. I could tell there was a great and powerful idea attempting to bust the rust on my gears. A great force was pulling against my pompous singular stasis. I squeezed my eyes shut as if my sinuses might suddenly clear, and puffer fish me up into a new awareness. The pressure changed in my head. Pop. Pop. Stop! I resisted.

What Patients Need, Want, and Expect (Via Twitter)

What is Our Voice?

The Innovation Cell’s Team will talk about your ideas, will issue innovation challenges, and will invite others to talk about the ideas they think can make change happen.

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