• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Susannah Fox

I help people navigate health and technology.

  • Home
  • Rebel Health
  • Blog
    • greatest hits
    • health data
    • peer-to-peer health care
    • public Q&A
  • About me
    • Bio
    • Now
    • Curriculum vitae
  • Events

Susannah Fox

The cost of satisfaction

June 13, 2014 By Susannah Fox Leave a Comment

My pick of the day for your reading list is a two-year-old article on the use of patient satisfaction surveys as a proxy for quality of care measures: The Cost of Satisfaction (JAMA Internal Medicine, 2012).

Filed Under: hc's problem list, policy issues, research issues

Health Datapalooza turns 5 (going on 15)

June 6, 2014 By Susannah Fox 2 Comments

Susannah Fox on screen at the Datapalooza - Photo by @CarlyRM

In my opening remarks for Health Datapalooza‘s final day, I tried to strike notes of “welcome!” and “let’s get real.” The adolescent meme got picked up, but without much context, so I thought I’d share what I said: The Datapalooza is five years old, but we are way past the kindergarten stage, when people outside the movement […]

Filed Under: health data, positive patterns, trends & principles Tagged With: Health Data, Health Datapalooza

Recognizing the value of data

May 30, 2014 By Susannah Fox 42 Comments

In 1999, when I was the editor of USNews.com, the dot-com boom was in full swing. Money seemed to be gushing out of the Bay Area and some sharpies at USNews saw an opportunity to cash in. They proposed slicing out the most marketable piece of the website — the education franchise — and selling […]

Filed Under: hc's problem list, medical records, trends & principles Tagged With: big data, cdc, E-Patient Dave, Epic, Health Datapalooza, John Halamka, John Moore, Paul Levy, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, SMARTHealthIT, USNews, VentureBeat

False boundaries in health care

May 17, 2014 By Susannah Fox 39 Comments

Light bulbs in the night sky - a photo by Ted Eytan

Clayton Christensen gave a talk at last week’s SMARTHealthIT board meeting on, as he put it, how people think. I was absorbed by his storytelling, so only wrote down a few concepts: We make assumptions based on false correlations (and we should guard against that tendency). Data and maps are verbs, not nouns, and they never tell the […]

Filed Under: positive patterns, pt/doc co-care Tagged With: Clayton Christensen, Condition H, Flip the Clinic, learning health system, SMARTHealthIT, SMS

20 minutes

May 13, 2014 By Susannah Fox 6 Comments

Grapefruit with telltale circle of an Epi-pen injection site

Food Allergy Awareness Week is May 11-17. I decided to honor it by writing my first public post about being a food-allergy mom. Wendy Sue Swanson, MD, aka @SeattleMamaDoc, is generously hosting it on her blog, where I hope it will reach many, many people. I’d love to hear what you think — about being […]

Filed Under: e-patient stories Tagged With: family, food allergy, Wendy Sue Swanson

On celebrating “small wins” and lifting up women and girls

April 25, 2014 By Susannah Fox 4 Comments

Two items stopped me in my tracks this week. Sharing them here on my outboard memory so I don’t forget (and hopefully they will inspire you, too).

Filed Under: key people, positive patterns Tagged With: Rare Disease, Stanford Medicine X

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 49
  • Go to page 50
  • Go to page 51
  • Go to page 52
  • Go to page 53
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 112
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Explore

Don't miss a post

Enter your email address and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Topics

  • Seekers
  • Networkers
  • Solvers
  • Champions
  • Health Data
  • Peer-to-Peer Health Care
  • Public Q&A

Recent Comments

  • Susannah Fox on Rare Disease in the NYT: “Liz, thank you for sharing this comment! I’m sorry for your loss and the experience you went through. Thank you…” Jul 4, 12:05
  • Liz on Rare Disease in the NYT: “The author’s willingness to grapple with her competing instincts is admirable. As a former “medical mom,” I found the peer-connection…” Jul 1, 21:46
  • Carrie Kimmell on Case study: Trevor’s disease: “Hi Jill – currently Brandon is walking without a limp (he is almost 15 now). He was going to undergo…” Jun 5, 14:07

Copyright Susannah Fox © 2025 · WordPress · Log in