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Susannah Fox

I help people navigate health and technology.

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Susannah Fox

Fact sheet: U.S. teens and adults at the intersection of health and technology

February 11, 2019 By Susannah Fox 1 Comment

Group of people in front of huge screen of numbers

In an earlier post I shared the history of the “fact sheets” I maintain about health and technology. I thought I’d share a few highlights from the grandmother of them all — key data points on U.S. teens and adults and their use of technology to pursue health. It is the first one I created when I […]

Filed Under: demographics Tagged With: digital divide, fact sheets, internet access, peer-to-peer healthcare, Pew Internet, social media, teens

A taxonomy of health data

February 4, 2019 By Susannah Fox 36 Comments

Red and green M&M candies both mixed and sorted by color

How do you define “health data”? To borrow a phrase from Daniel Solove, it is a concept in disarray and in need of a taxonomy. Here are the items that fall naturally into the health data basket: electronic health record data current or past health and disability status, including mental and physical well-being medication lists […]

Filed Under: health data, internet geology, policy issues Tagged With: Daniel Solove, Health Data, Hipaa

Podcasts: What are you listening to?

January 28, 2019 By Susannah Fox 34 Comments

Rhubarb strawberries and a knife

What podcasts are you listening to? I’m on a kick to listen to a wider range this year and I’d love to get and share some suggestions. Quick note: It is way too difficult to find and subscribe to podcasts. Some have websites, most don’t. You have to search for them on iTunes, Stitcher, or […]

Filed Under: key people Tagged With: a16z, Anil Sethi, BackStory, Bill Thomas, Bryan Vartabedian, Ciitizen, Dan Diamond, David Shaywitz, Esther Perel, How to be a girl, Joe Kvedar, Kara Swisher, Leslie Kernisan, Lisa Suennen, Marlo Mack, npr, pandemic, podcasts, Preet Bharara, Sam Sanders, Slow Burn, The Moth, transgender, Uncivil

Public Q&A: Empowering people in their relationships with clinicians

January 21, 2019 By Susannah Fox 32 Comments

Painting shows three people reaching out as they climb a giant Rolodex

In the spirit of public Q&A, I’m sharing an intriguing question I received recently from a community colleague. Check out my answer and then add your ideas and suggestions in the comments below. Do you know of any particularly good or interesting services to empower patients in their relationships with doctors, especially ones which involve […]

Filed Under: patient networks, peer-to-peer health care, public Q&A Tagged With: #InventHealth, Clinicians, Facebook, Inspire, Invent Health, maker movement, patient activation, patientslikeme, peer-to-peer healthcare, Smart Patients, Streetwyze, Voro

The P stands for portability

January 18, 2019 By Susannah Fox Leave a Comment

Image of a sound board with the words "a16z podcast"

One of my core beliefs is that we need to open up access to the data, information, and tools people need to solve their own problems in health care — or at least give people the chance to direct their data to experts who can help them. I recently had the chance to be part […]

Filed Under: hc's problem list, health data, key people, medical records, policy issues Tagged With: Andreessen Horowitz, Anil Sethi, Ciitizen, Hipaa, podcasts, Sonal Chokshi, Vijay Pande

Helping people find the needle in a data haystack

January 14, 2019 By Susannah Fox 8 Comments

Needle in haystack by Madhavi Kuram on Flickr

One of the most important customer-service lessons I ever learned was from E-patient Dave: when it comes to disseminating research, give people what they need, not what you want to create. About a decade ago, Dave was on deadline to turn in slides for a presentation. He needed one key survey finding to illustrate a […]

Filed Under: demographics, research issues, social media, trends & principles Tagged With: fact sheets, HopeLab Foundation, Pew Internet, Pew Research Center, social media, survey, teens, Vicky Rideout, Well Being Trust

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